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2 hours later…
4:33 AM
@Electrical_engineer_student Basically I don't talk to anybody who asks me leet coder questions. Not sure if this is a winning strategy but I don't have time to practice or study coding interview questions.
 
 
2 hours later…
6:41 AM
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn there used to be a common interview question where somebody would ask you to write a program that determines the L1 cache at runtime.
 
I think the best way to learn data structures is to pick a language and just start implementing. LinkedLists, Binary Trees, Sorting algorithms are all the first DS they have you create in a college class
 
7:01 AM
@Mikhail any suggestions on how someone would do that? Never had to care anyhow about caching at all
In 2-3 words. No need to get into details
 
Cache misses take longer than cache hits, so start timing memory accesses in increasingly narrowing patterns AKA maybe try accessing memory in 512 byte strides, then try 256 byte strides. Now its a little tricky to implement in a functioning way correct because you need to do things to defeat prefetch, or even lock the clock frequency. You can see the guys at ATLAS struggling to get it right.
 
 
3 hours later…
9:53 AM
@Mikhail how to get a job then? Every single software job I applied to sends me a link to do an online assessment which is timed. If you fail the test you are immediately rejected.
basically the questions are similar to this: app.codility.com/programmers/lessons/16-greedy_algorithms
 
nwp
That never happened to me. We must be looking at very different places for jobs.
 
You have started at a different time. 30 years ago, you don't need a interview to land on a programming job (so I heard)
 
where do you live? I live in England. I can't think of a single job I applied to that didn't require some sort of online assessment(mainly algorithms).
 
10:08 AM
I don't think it's as much about where you live but also where you apply. If you just apply to the tech-giants for entry-/mid- level positions you're going to encounter those tests a lot.

But software is everywhere nowadays, if you apply to a smaller company or a company that doesn't primarily produce software, but needs software for its core business you're a lot less likely to encounter the automated tests.
 
I haven't really applied to any tech-giants as such. I applied to a Bank, credit card company and small software company. All had online tests but could be a coincidence.
 
Entry level situation.
 
yeah I applied to entry level/internship type jobs
 
Also England is the wrong country to be a programmer. Ideally you should be in the US, more programming positions, and easier to get in one.
I worked in England for 3 months, I found programming position there generally offers a lower salary to say, US or HK (if you are in finance IT).
 
If he's looking for an entry level position in the UK then I don't think he can easily get a US work permit
 
10:19 AM
I'll keep trying because I can't really do much else apart from general software or electronic/embedded. Embedded has even less jobs.
 
Freelancing until you can get a perm role?
 
imo I wouldn't move to the US because of the stringent visa process and that wastes a lot of time. I think it might be better to accomplish something then move there? I would think US would be far more competitive too
 
 
3 hours later…
1:35 PM
Any good sample code on object recognition that's not written in python, recommendations? Ideally written in C++/Java, but shell script could do.
 
1:54 PM
do you want like one of those generic object recognition neural nets that just say "chair", "car", "person", etc. Or do you want something hand-rolled specific with like traditional computer vision stuff?
I guess no one really does hand rolled stuff seriously outside of like industrial applications and stuff. So the more pertinent question is probably do you want a pre-trained net or train something yourself
 
2:15 PM
Pre-trained ideally, because I am lazy.
 
 
3 hours later…
5:11 PM
Hey, everyone. I haven't used the chat feature much, so please help me out. Would be OK if I ask for software recommendation?
 
it's ok to ask for software recommendations. But it's not ok to ask if it's ok to ask for software recommendation :P
 
Hahaha, awesome. So I've mostly done C++ dev on Windows up to this point. I have some experience with Linux, but not much. What distro would be solid, reliable and complete with all the needed tools for that?
I've got good hardware, so that's not an issue. Planning on dual-booting
 
WSL
 
Interesting. That would also be the the most frictionless for now.
 
I'm just trolling tbh
But if you just want to start experimenting and always use Windows, then it's worth giving it a try
It can be rather slow though
 
5:23 PM
what's been slow for you? I've most had it work alright
I mean I didn't try the UI stuff, if that's what you mean
 
My test suite takes forever to run
 
are you accessing the windows file-system from the WSL side?
that can be somewhat slow. Not docker on macos level slow, but slow
 
I've tried a couple. I guess Ubuntu has the most help online so I might go with that
fedora has been nice in the past, but rather unstable
 
@PeterT No
I'm just using CTest over Catch2
 
arch has some very extensive and helpful documentation, but it's very hard to set up and use
 
5:37 PM
This version sounds like I'm having a stroke
I love it
Also feels like my test suite running over WSL
 
 
6:33 PM
@nwp It got a lot worse over the last few years. Half the jobs I applied to forwarded me a software test. Admittedly the first part of the interview was not difficult in the sense I passed them all without preparing.
 
 
5 hours later…
11:51 PM
 

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