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Admin
Admin
For the stored procedures one I think I would have made sure he heard me correctly. If he's been out of the DB world for a while his brain might have just gone to what he's used to first or he could have misheard. To dismiss someone that quickly because someone might be hard of hearing is kind of a dick move.
Admin
For the stored procedures one I think I would have made sure he heard me correctly. If he's been out of the DB world for a while his brain might have just gone to what he's used to first or he could have misheard. To dismiss someone that quickly because someone might be hard of hearing is kind of a dick move.
Admin
It's sad that people are such prudes. If it were me interviewing that guy would have moved to the top of the list.
Admin
Don't bother posting without a non-returnable photograph.
Admin
Admin
Store procedure was an honest mistake.
CAPTCHA: LUPTATUM
Admin
We try to keep secret. Now that the news is out, I guess a lot of people will come into the profession and it will bring our salary down.
Admin
The real WTF is that the 'Porn Guy' is called Liz.
Admin
I bet the Porn Guy had plenty of non-returnable photographs for the third company
Admin
CAPTCHA: secundum .... indeed.
Admin
While I've never read up on actual discrimination laws, it sounds actionable to refuse to consider hiring someone because of a completely legal job in their past. That would be like me showing someone the door because he admitted to being "Barney" on television years ago. It feels justified but it ain't ethical.
Admin
I've got some very tasteful pictures of my girlfriend I took just out of high-school. Would one of those work?
Admin
Admin
This is a story that is so unbelievable I wouldn't believe it if I hadn't experienced it personally.
We occasionally give a simple coding test to candidates. We are a primarily embedded systems company, so one question on the test is:
"What is an atomic operation?"
We have in our archives the hand-written response: "it involves the nucleus of atoms."
Admin
Me no get it. Why is it an interview fail? Honest question. After all, it was an interview for a database developer position, and it would have been reasonable to ask for one's experience with stored procedures. Where they simple? Where they complex? Any problems in deployment? How do you debug them? Pros, cons? The whole enchilada. I don't see how this question was teh failx0r.
Admin
"everyone is not technically inclined"
I'm not sure if that is what you really meant ;)
capio: leo?
Admin
My experience tells me that stored procedures are a thing of the past. You should keep away from them as much as possible.
You should rely on ORM tools like Hibernate and that will obviate the need to write any stored procedures.
Death to stored procs, I say.
CAPTCHA: nimis
Admin
Well, it's fairly common to send photographs with a resume over here in Germany. Ok, that's normally a very formal, decent photo as for a passport, but some people also send more "nice" photos to present themselves in a hopefully positive way. This is a funny issue that in USA people are fearing discrimination by giving away their photo on this occasion, normally it's us here in Europe who have bigger fears of privacy violations, see all these StreetView and Facebook troubles recently.
Admin
Admin
I'd say it's abundantly clear you've never read up on employment discrimination laws. The only things you can't legally discriminate based on are the so called "protected classes": race, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, familial status, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability or veteran status. You can not hire someone because you don't like the color of their tie if you so choose and it's totally legal.
Admin
Picture this: you're in an interview. The candidate asks you: "Do you know x?" You want to appear qualified for the job. What is your answer: yes or no?
Admin
Admin
Admin
It´s not about sending a non-returnable photograph at all but about sending a non-returnable photograph by email.
Admin
Don't fall for that kool-aid. ORMs have their place, but are not general silver bullets. Nothing is. Like anything, they have limitations (severe limitations), and if your architecture deeply relies on having a ORM, you might as well model and store your data on a OO or graph database instead of plastering yet another layer of abstraction on top of your persistence layer just so that you can claim "look, OO!".
Stored procedures have their place, and like anything (ORMs included), they can be used wisely or abused. After all, there are massive relational systems that work just fine and that need extension or integration. And there are applications that are naturally relational (and for which using a ORM is like forcing a square peg on a round hole.
What are you going to do? Rewrite them all just so that they use a ORM? Dead to stored procedures, nice wishful (and impractical from an engineering standpoint) thinking. When people start saying "death to this or that", it indicates they might not have a firm grasp on the technical issues at hand.
Admin
non-returnable email...
[image]Admin
Admin
Admin
Admin
In the affirmative, it would be "yes, I've done such and such with x", or "yes, but my experience with x have been limited to such and such".
In the negative, it would be "no, but I've worked on things that resemble x in such and such way", or "no, I've only read about them", or "no, I'm not familiar with that technology."
Moreover, every time I get a question, I repeat the question back to the interviewer (and rephrase and reformulate if the question is too open ended), to make sure it is what he/she is asking.
In an interview, no question is truly a yes/no question, regardless of how the question is presented. If you treat the question as a yes/no question (and the interviewer might be tricking you into doing so for whatever reason), that's on you.
Besides, in an interview for a database development position, how else can someone applying for that position can take "Do you know x"? Context is everything, and the person going into an interview is responsible for being aware of that technology-specific context. Interviewers are not obliged to chew and ruminate questions out until they are these 100% unambiguous, easily digestible snow flakes. They are not.
Maybe (and I'm honestly saying this) I'm missing something legit that you are trying to say with regard to the validity of the interview question. But honestly, I just don't see it.
Admin
Admin
Admin
I know, for example, that a landlord can refuse to rent to someone based on their job. (At least that's true in New York.)
Admin
Admin
What kind of questions would you propose?
Admin
Interviews are supposed to contain open-ended questions. It is up the interviewee to negotiate and work with the interviewer for an interpretation of such questions. If the interviewee just takes the question 'as-is', that's his/her fail. The interviewer gets a lot of feedback by looking at how the interviewee reacts to such questions - is he/she engaging me in refining the question until it becomes unambiguous, asking for clarifications? Or is he/she acting like a dumb oracle automaton?
Admin
Also I am surprised that the person in the last story was to cheap to visit his friendly file manager and spring for another copy of his jpeg...
Admin
Admin
To be fair, atomic operations are not just restricted to that realm. They are at the heart of database transactions (or in systems programing wrt to uninterruptible ops). A person with a CS degree should (must) know what an atomic operation is, at least conceptually.
Admin
I just spoke to the senior vice-president of technical development in my company and he thinks you're only partly right.
Captcha: praesent (I am present)
Admin
Admin
And of course, the onus is on you to prove that you weren't hired because of one of the "naughty" categories. As long as they can come up with a reasonable explanation, they're off the hook. (And even if you win, I wouldn't count on a long and productive stay there anyway.)
Admin
Admin
Admin
In the second, "Liz" is usually a she, not a he.
Admin
(What's with the black-on-dark-grey captcha? Discriminating against people with poor night sight?)
Admin
Yeah, it really is a bit like asking an imperative programmer, "so, how about those user-defined functions?" Or like asking a truck driver, "so how do you feel about steering wheels?"
Admin
Brush up your spelling skills.
Admin
No, if you had never actually learned SQL and, like most of the people I see on DB forums, just copy-paste code you might not actually know what a stored procedure is, even if you did use them.