The only thing I remember about that e-mail is that it has an attachment. Searching has:attachment on my mail box returns "many" results, according to GMail. ARhgsujhrgre.
@DeadMG If they want a "complete employment history" (never mind that thats what the application form they will give you after they make you an offer), then list it and (obviously) no technical projects with it.
I hope google's interviewing has improved. I interviewed with them once and they wanted me to effectively quote man pages. Isn't that what google is for?
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you've got experience in the one that company interviewing you is using, that's one thing less you have to learn on the job. I guess that's the viewpoint
@R.MartinhoFernandes It also says you understand the concept -- regardless of what tool they are using. (Of course, as said, if you know the tool already, thats even better).
@DeadMG Put it as close as you think you are. They'll have a different idea of what each number had than you, but if you say 9 and they think 7, then you over-rated yourself.
I just say I have C++ skills. If you want to evaluate me, my evaluation is worthless. If you want to trust my evaluation, I'm not sure I want to work with you.
@JonathanSeng Well, then you can basically answer that there is no way you can accurately rate your knowledge of something as large and complexe as C++ (and imply that anyone who claims otherwise so it talking out of his ass).
There are multiple scales: years doing X, rate out of Y, text description.... They are all kinda pointless. Tell what you did on a project in your resume, and talk more at length with them.