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23:04
@Insilico Even Windows Live knows way more about me than I'm comfortable with. I have not been buddies with windows system since NT4.
right
so back to the question of what I write to that Oracle recruiter
@DeadMG I'm very happy that I don't need to make that decision. I'm one lucky dude.
lol
@DeadMG Just put your writing in tex =) Not that Office dunk. =)
@DeadMG "I'm awesome. Hire me."?
23:11
I finally understood promises. I took the liberty of answering my own question.
Also, I was excited to learn that the same Anthony Williams that posts on SO is also the author of the book on concurrency
@DeadMG Are you getting a job?
Oh, apparently I created an infinite datastruture without realizing it.
This results in crazy error message. Theoretically there could be an infinite amount of vlan tags on a packet. GCC wants to generate code for that :P
@KerrekSB Well, I'm speaking to a dude at Oracle about recruiting me. Whether or not he does is another question
working for Oracle seems like a pretty terrible idea
@DeadMG Are you tempted? Do you know any details about the role?
@DeadMG Are you gonna propose marriage to him ?
23:15
@KerrekSB No. Manofoneway made an introduction.
he works on the Graal compiler
it's basically compiler-as-a-service for the JVM
@DeadMG I see. Could be interesting?
absolutely could be
In any case, you can (should?) always go for the interview. If nothing else, interviewing experience is vital.
but, more importantly, in my current state I really can't afford to be picky
in a sense, the interview doesn't concern me, because when I'm asked a question, it's easy to provide an answer
And always remember that an interview goes both ways, and it's absolutely OK and expected for you to discover whether you want the role.
23:17
whereas when you're being headhunted, you don't even know what the questions are, as it were
@DeadMG But the headhunter isn't doing the interview
They just want to find apt candidates
no, but he is evaluating you based on the information you provide
Is it an Oracle-internal recruiter?
I actually don't know
Headhunters should be the one doing job interviews. It would make things more simple.
23:18
The recruiter is usually your friend, not your enemy. They're trying their best to find suitable people to suggest.
also of note: I am looking into polishing my degree off with a different subject
maybe Physics, since I like Physics
May Lord Feymman be with you
well, the OU is pretty flexible in these things
If you can convince the recruiter that you'll make a good candidate, then they have someone they can forward to the employer, which is what they want to do. Just be honest with them. I have no doubt that you have enough knowledge and skill to be desirable to the company!
in my limited experience with recruiters, they've been a complete and utter waste of everyone's time
23:20
@jalf In my experience, the exact opposite happened :-S
@LeandroPezzente Dick was not about physics. Dick was physics.
well, I actually have virtually no idea who this guy is or even what his job is
@CaptainGiraffe I'm not sure if the physics of dicks are that interesting.
I think he might even be a developer or project lead or something...
@DeadMG The recruiter should know some vague details about the role and the requirements. In any case, can't you just ask?
23:21
but what I want to do is change my CV.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dick made it interesting, that is important
it's some totally shitty template that looks like crap.
@CaptainGiraffe Yeap , I totally Agree. Feymann was Physics Embodied.
@KerrekSB No, "this guy" is the recruiter.
Also, you can usually be very informal with the recruiter. They will help you make your CV look good if they think it needs work
23:22
@jalf The same has happened to me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Richard "Dick" Feymann actually had an inmense utter love for Brazil.
I mean, ultimately, there are only three things which I need to put on my CV right now
done two years of my CS degree at XYZ university, lots of exposure to C++ in that time, and maybe my SO stuff.
@LeandroPezzente The Dude could talk about rubber bands, and I'll be at the seat of my pants
some guy with no clue what you can do, or what the job requires you to do, trying to play buzzword bingo with your CV, just does not seem like a constructive use of time and resources
@DeadMG The recruiter should not turn you down because of your CV. Rather, he should advise you on how to make your CV as convincing as possible
@DeadMG Have you graduated yet?
@LeandroPezzente I'm not sure how that's relevant, but I like random trivia.
23:24
@KerrekSB No. And I'm not going to (in the foreseeable future). That being the reason why I'm having fun hunting for jobs instead of having companies crawl all over me :P
If it's a technical role, they'll want to see skill rather than degrees.
@KerrekSB Missing a "not"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes! Edited.
having companies crawl all over you doesn't sound pleasant anyway
well, the introductory email does basically ask for code samples
so that could be a lot worse
23:24
@CaptainGiraffe Man ... he could explain Quantum Chromodynamics after an all party nighty and a monstruous hang over ... and oh yeah ... Bongos !.
link to bitbucket account - see all my concurrent distributed agents simulation code
@LeandroPezzente Dude those bum, batititibum badabum
There should be plenty of companies that hire based on skill. If you can demonstrate stuff, write code, reason through problems, solve puzzles... the degree should be secondary
@DeadMG Right
@KerrekSB I might be biased, but yes, degree is a distant secondary.
@KerrekSB Indeed. But many have a degrees-only filter, effectively.
anyways, things could be a lot worse for me
23:27
Yeah, you could be dead.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Still a whole lot of MG.
even if I don't land a job, I could crack out some XNA or Android game, or sell a C++ book, or freelance, or something
You could be doomed to work freelance
@DeadMG If you're really desperate, give me a shout :-)
@KerrekSB if you get 60 applications for a position, you can typically afford to look at the ones with degrees first, and only go to the ones without if you absolutely have to. Saves you a lot of work
23:28
@jalf If you get 60 applications for a position, it's time to change your recruiter.
"should" has little to do with it. A degree is a nice rough filtering criteria
@KerrekSB FWIW, you've also mis-spelled your constructor as my_tast instead of my_task.
@KerrekSB /shout :P
@JerryCoffin Thanks!
@KerrekSB recruiter? This is just by placing a job ad on a relevant website.
23:28
@KerrekSB No problem.
A new person recently joined our team. Seems like a smart chap. Civil engineer and shit.
Hello.
@jalf Well then, point made!
@Rapptz Hi there.
And like I said before, in my experience, recruiters just don't have the domain knowledge required to do a better screening. "It said XML on his CV. And C++ was there too!"
23:29
They are matching words.
If you need better preselection, you can get a recruiter to do the filtering for you
@jalf Quality varies, that's true
@KerrekSB but why would you trust him to do a better job at filtering?
Because that's his job!
@R.MartinhoFernandes So?
23:30
@jalf Because (assuming they're good at their job) that's what they do all day every day
It's a professional!
I'm not in a hiring position, but my boss seems keen on hiring nice guys. Nice and humble is very good in my experience.
@KerrekSB Yeah, but he does it based on bullshit criteria, because he's not a programmer, and he doesn't understand programming and he doesn't understand what the candidate can do and he doesn't understand what the company needs
Recruiters don't have to hurry through 60 applications in one day. They can actually do some proper sieving.
@jalf I don't know. I was not trying to make a point, but a joke (And hey, someone laughed!).
23:31
You're not gonna hire a Newton if you go for nice guys :)
@jalf I'm not saying it's not difficult. A good recruiter is almost as hard to find as a good developer :-)
@StackedCrooked True. I don't want Newton here either way.
@KerrekSB I'm saying the notion of a "good recruiter" is absurd
The reality is that good developers are really rare.
@jalf Well, speak for yourself.
23:32
How would he be good? How would he do a good screening, when he doesn't know understand what he's screening for?
@StackedCrooked That's true for pretty much any skilled profession, no?
It makes as much sense as astrology. I'm sure the stars know a lot about what my future holds. And I'm sure some guy who's never written a line of code knows how to tell a good programmer from a bad one
@jalf Educated guessing.
@jalf Who's to say that recruiters can't learn enough of the field to distinguish a C++ programmer from a PHP scripter? Anyway, the key quality of a recruiter is to communicate needs in both directions.
If the company says "C++, not PHP", then the recruiter must be sure that the candidate knows that. Additionally, they must make sure the candidate knows they have to be honest with their skills.
@KerrekSB needs can be communicated just fine by removing that middleman though. That just makes it easier, in my experience
@KerrekSB if you place a job ad which says "C++, not PHP" then the candidate also knows it
23:34
Recruiters can also run some basic screening tests -- this may be as little as asking some multiple choice questions from a list.
@KerrekSB Like what is your favorite coding exercise
@KerrekSB The internet can do that too...
My boss is doing basically that to screen candidates. Send them a link to a C++ quiz he created
I think that perhaps the recruiters are paid according to the number of hires they achieve. So I guess they'd go for a larger coverage to maximize their winnings.
@jalf Look, you're not going to weed someone out who intentionally wants to fake skills. But that's not the purpose. Someone like that won't get far in the long run.
damn
23:36
@StackedCrooked They do that, too. But it's a two-edged sword. A recruiter to makes too many poor suggestions to an employer risks being dropped altogether
@KerrekSB so who are recruiters going to weed out? Someone who doesn't claim to have skills are pretty trivial to weed out without paying him a lot of money
did you guys hear about that convicted murderer who became the chief of a goddamn ambulance service?
a goddamn ambulance service!
@jalf For starters, they go looking for suitable people, rather than place job ads at train stations. So you get a different baseline of people.
@KerrekSB train stations?
23:37
E.g. on CareerOverflow :-)
His ability to carry people into cars may be useful.
@jalf Or wherever
well, I think it's certainly win
Point is, if you have an open, free-for-all job ad, you're bound to get many people who overrate themselves
@KerrekSB well, some people would place the ad on a website dedicated to, say, programming job ads
23:38
pity he got fired when it turned out he was a murderer :P
@jalf But those are also free-for-all
@KerrekSB Just like you do with recruiters
Whoever upvoted my answers today, thanks. It was nice of you.
@KerrekSB yup, but they're seen by people you might have an interest in hiring
@jalf Sure. Just expect a high noise ratio
23:39
In my experience you get a high noise ratio with recruiters as well. I don't think there's a way around that
I don't know. I've been finding quick phone screens pretty useful
You can discard a no-go in a few minutes' time
Thing is , Job interviews should be all about Demostrating your knowledge and skills not about Convincing some non-literated guy you have them
@KerrekSB maybe I'm missing something, but how does that relate to recruiters?
why not apply to a company run by engineers
you can phone screen candidates no matter how you found them/how the found you
23:40
@jalf It doesn't. It was a separate mechanism for weeding.
ah right
like nvidia or something
Not CV based
@pyCthon That doesn't guarantee that the company isn't a huge WTF. :-P
@pyCthon Isnt that what Google was in its beginings ?
23:41
@pyCthon I would love to have a word with someone at nVidia about their 300+ MB driver updates.
LOL
well a good one now might be arista :p
I cant still understand why wannabe-psychologist should decide about who is "qualified" and who doesnt.
Its just doesnt makes sense
@LeandroPezzente yeah true maybe bad example
where is the "peer-review" mechanism in there ?
the point is to avoid a peer review, because peer reviews take up peer time
23:44
@LeandroPezzente the root of the headhunters are traditionally in finance where its understandable , at a hedge fund your not allowed to advertise jobs and if your a small firm how else will you get talented people to join
for a big company thats not in finance there really is no need for a headhunter / recruiter
@jalf If thats true , then most companies are run by ignorant jerks.
@LeandroPezzente nah, it makes sense, the problem is real. It takes an insane amount of time to process job applications if you don't have some kind of screening/filtering process set up
a recruiter is one way to do that. I prefer other approaches, but the problem they try to solve is real
@KerrekSB /shout? :P
if you have a team of programmers, you don't want them spending 50% of their time looking at job applications and CVs
@jalf Programmer time is le expensive.
23:46
@pyCthon If their root is in finance then I dont see their usefullnes in a IT Field.
@DeadMG exactly
user406009
Just wondering, do you guys have any suggestions for where a high school student could find any sort of programming internship?
@EthanSteinberg Does your high school have a career center of some kind?
@EthanSteinberg IME, they are all for students between their second and third years of a CS degree.
even if you have the second year down, if you're not taking a third then they're not interested
user406009
@Insilico They have a retail career center.
23:47
@jalf If you can hire a Psychologist to do that , you can also hire a Programmer to do that.
@LeandroPezzente they some how wealsed their way in i guess
hey guys why does -1 / ((unsigned)1) returns not -1
@EthanSteinberg not with a big company but there are tons of open source projects
user406009
@lezebulon In C++ things are promoted to the biggest type
doesn't -1 get type converted because of the (unsigned )
23:48
@lezebulon Becaused signed integral types are implicitly converted to unsigned types.
@LeandroPezzente except that hiring a programmer is a really hard problem. That's the entire point. So if you do manage to hire a programmer, you really really want him to be able to focus on programming
user406009
The biggest type in that expression is unsigned, so the whole thing becomes unsigned.
user406009
(By biggest type I mean whatever type can hold the largest number)
So the -1 signed constant gets converted to its unsigned equivalent.
user406009
If it was -1L instead of 1 you should get -1.
23:49
so I have to static_cast<int> the denominator?
@jalf I kinda thougth there was bigger number of programmers than open job positions.
uh, the unsigned version of -1 is not 1
user406009
(Actually nvm, depends on if long is bigger than int)
@LeandroPezzente there are, but most of them suck
it's probably LONG_MAX
23:50
@DeadMG yep
@lezebulon No, you just have to write code that doesn't suck. Like not using casts when you don't need it.
If they didn't, there'd be no point in doing any kind of screening. You could just pick 4 random candidates, interview them, and then hire the best one
@DeadMG yeah I get 4 billions and some if I do that
@jalf Ohhh .. so the problem is a Darwinian Food Chain relationship.
@jalf FWIW, my oldest brother is on a hiring committee at Google. He's said they know their hiring process doesn't work well at all, and they've been studying it for years now, and gotten virtually nowhere. The only factor they've found that gives a decent indication is if an applicant's former coworker already works at Google, and they can talk to them. They put lots of work into interviews and such, but know that they're pretty much a waste of time.
23:51
@JerryCoffin hmm, interesting
@JerryCoffin hmm... yeah very interesting...
it's a hard problem, and people try lots of different things to deal with it. Not even Google has found the answer yet :)
@Insilico the denominator is a template parameter that has to be unsigned int, how do I do without a cast??
which reminds me, I have an email from a google recruiter somewhere. I never got around to answering it. :/
lol
23:52
@lezebulon Why does it have to be an unsigned int?
@jalf Getting back to first base , why not screen based on demostrating knowledge and skills instead of having to chat about them?
@LeandroPezzente having someone demonstrate their knowledge and skills to you takes up a lot of your time
@Insilico because it's the size of my game map
Signed types work just as well as unsigned types in nontype template parameters
@jalf Most recuiters are already making people waste an enourmous amount of time
23:53
at least if they do it in person
@LeandroPezzente That's what my current employer did. Sent me an email with a coding problem, gave me a time limit to respond. Got an interview after that.
@LeandroPezzente sure, but they don't (or they claim not to) waste too much of the hiring party's time, which is the important bit ;)
it's ok that they waste their own time, and the candidates' time ;)
user406009
@lezebulon Just cast the denominator to int with the static cast. That's the easiest solution.
how would you set only all values of inf and -inf to zero in a std::complex array?
in theory you just tell the recruiter what you need, and then he finds a small number of good candidates for you. If that works, then you've saved a lot of your own time
23:54
@pyCthon Loop over them, check value, set to zero if necessary?
@lezebulon What are you trying to do with the size of the game map that requires signed arithmetic?
my problem with it is that in my experience, it doesn't work
So , in wich point are they being Intelligent and Not Perverse ?
@DeadMG i tried with numeric limits and it doesn't work
@pyCthon wat?
23:55
@jalf Neither in mine.
what does numeric limits have to do with anything?
user406009
user406009
Assuming that you have C++11.
is a cast of a constant transformed into a compile constant as well?
@EthanSteinberg compiler is old 4.2.1
23:56
@Chimera yeah, we've started doing something similar
user406009
@pyCthon I think it's also in c99's math.h.
@jalf In my opinion , Hiring someone should be all about excellence , not about cutting expenses.
like if I cast a const unsigned int into a int ?
@lezebulon Yes, unless you have a really stupd compiler.
thanks
23:57
@LeandroPezzente it's both. You hire people because you need more programming done, in a nutshell. If half your team spends most of their time processing job applications, then you get less programming done.
@LeandroPezzente There are web sites (e.g., BrainBench) that specialize in providing testing for (among other things) applicants. Unfortunately, objective tests generally do a poor job of indicating quality of code, ability to work in a team, etc.
@jalf It allowed the interview to be less about technical skills and more about interpersonal skills.
It's not so much monetary expenses that matter, but time. The time of your small, highly skilled group of programmers is a finite, limited resource
@JerryCoffin Hmmm ... I am not very fond of soft skills myself.
@LeandroPezzente Fond or not, they're important. Being able to write code is all fine and dandy, but if you can't communicate well enough to (for example) figure out what's really needed, you're not likely to accomplish much.
23:59
@jalf Still , thats sounds very Elitistic.

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