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20:05
Really I'm just using flowery and vague language to praise critical thinking, skepticism, and creativity. I don't think I can deceive anybody about these kinds of things, because if I'm doing a good job of communicating their value, then the audience will become immune to deception.
And if I'm doing a bad job, then everybody should just ignore my ramblings like they always do.
Here's the real question: "Does one brag about SO rep right off or toward the end of the interview?"
@Kevin Or take your ramblings out of context
20:45
@Dodge I don't think the timing matters. It's a question of whether to do it at all. If any of the interviewers know anything of SO rep, they'll also know that it isn't a measure of goodness. If they aren't familiar, or just vaguely so, it might have a chance at impressing. Personally, I had it on my resume and let others ask me about it.
Also, I didn't mention rep, I mentioned my pandas tag points.
"they'll also know that it isn't a measure of goodness" could you elaborate on this? Why do you think this? @piRSquared
Cause rep can be gained by means that don't contribute to your "knowledge/goodness"
You can probably guess how by now
@Erfan there are low(er) rep users in this room that can run circles around me as far as Python/Coding knowledge is concerned. I know of many high rep users whose answers I take with a grain of salt. As a metric it is loosely correlated with the respect I'd have for a persons coding ability... but only loosely
Also, the flipside is true as well. Someone with low rep can be really good too.
I was being facetious mostly but I'm sure you caught that. On the other hand, it's impossible for me to imagine a hiring manager for a programming outfit that is not familiar with SO. Personally, if I had any SO rep to speak of it would be the first thing out of my mouth :)
20:52
@piRSquared I agree with the first part that low rep users can have lot of knowledge, simply because they don't spend much time on SO. But on the other hand, higher rep users mostly if not all (from what iv'e seen) have a (really) good understanding of their domain. Obviously in the higher rep users you have a variance of quality as well. But the baseline is there if you ask me, that's why I think its definitely worth mentioning in an interview.
That's what a resume/cv is for. That piece of paper should be used to encourage people to ask you things that you can't wait to elaborate on. The one time I tore a candidate to shreds is when they put on their resume that they "retained employment amid layoffs". My response was driven by my thinking "Really, they are bragging about not getting let go!? But what did they do at this job?"
And what did they do? Company Fredo?
Made sandwiches at Panera Bread (if you're not familiar panerabread.com/en-us/home.html)
They ended up getting a job elsewhere in the company and I gave them some resume/interview tips for next time. It was an entry level job. But it was the only time I could remember giving an interviewee a hard time.
> Access Denied
You don't have permission to access "http://www.panerabread.com/en-us/home.html" on this server.
smooth GDPR solution
lol... that should be my solution to the question of whether or not I should access a site. I'll ask a European to try first.
21:07
even when we can access a site we usually drown in cookie dough popups
This has been bugging me for a while. What is the purpose of those popups?
It just seems to have made general web browsing miserable
They need your explicit consent to handle your data.
I dont feel protected against anything, just bombarded with "i accept" options
They also have to inform you of how they use your data but that's less of a problem. Pushing popups in your face and having to click them away ticks the little legal box that says "user gave informed consent to handling and selling their data"
The price paid for GDPR is just so disproportionate in user experience
21:11
If you include data safety and accountability in UX then it's a huge plus.
Any general tips when applying for a "data" related position? @piRSquared
(service provider experience is a different matter)
@AndrasDeak at a guess, it's about 90% of sites I view and if I decline, I sometimes can't view the site. Have we really won on this vein?
@Erfan unfortunately no. I'm a financial research analyst. I deal with data but I have no idea what someone dedicated a data related position would want to know about a candidate.
@roganjosh Yes. Why do you decline? Because you don't like them selling your data. Without GDPR they'd be selling your data and you wouldn't even know and if you did you wouldn't be able to do anything about it. Now you have a choice: use it or don't.
21:14
I see, just got accepted at a new company, but I find interviews still really hard. And at this interview I had to make 3 cases "live", which was pretty cool, but I was quite nervous @pir
@AndrasDeak @roganjosh if devs/companies improve UX then users will be driven to those sites.
I spent some time looking for a weather report site that let me view it without consenting to selling my data (accuweather which is usually the default in android apps is very naughty in this regard). Eventually found timeanddate.com (ha!) and I'm happy
how can I subset a dataframe using three or more datetime ranges. Meaning I need the data only inside below time-ranges in one dataframe. Do these answers look reasonable?

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38266461/pandas-dataframe-slicing-with-multiple-date-ranges


'fileid' 'start' 'stop'
x12547829x 2018-04-25 08:28:00 2018-04-26 15:30:00
x12547829x 2018-04-24 16:00:00 2018-04-25 07:25:00
x12547829x 2018-04-18 07:30:00 2018-04-18 19:00:00
So conclusion: I find interviews really hard (only had 2 yet though)
I generally don't decline. But when I tested it, I get kicked out. So, what is the whole purpose? I have to repeatedly accept on every site or just not view it. I don't find the bombardment of things needing approval helpful
21:17
@pyeR_biz unless there's a dedicated method then the boolean mask seems good for potentially overlapping intervals, and I suspect the slicing might be better from a don't-copy-much-data standpoint (assuming sliced rows don't copy data).
@roganjosh it's not about keeping you happy, it's about keeping you safe. Also bureaucrats coming up with laws never guarantee that laws make sense as intended (on the contrary)
@AndrasDeak Is there a way to apply subsets for n number of conditions. I have variable number of time ranges for different files/datasets.
A bit hacky but np.logical_or.reduce can take an iterable of boolean masks and or them together.
np.logical_or.reduce([df[time_from:time_to] for time_from,time_to in intervals])
something like that ^
@AndrasDeak looks like a plan, thank you
I don't know if pandas offers anything for this (I know numpy and I don't know pandas)
@AndrasDeak whoops, the argument of the list comp is a mess there
np.logical_or.reduce([(time_from <= df.index) & (df.index <= time_to) for time_from,time_to in intervals])
@pyeR_biz sorry, I meant ^ that.
the first version would need pd.concatenate or something outside rather than logical operations
@AndrasDeak Thanks, I'll explore the better fit to my data. Because I'm pretty all the time stamps will be in the data
22:28
@DeveshKumarSingh Yes I was intentionally using it. By coincidence there was a muddled SFGate article supposedly on Bay Area slang, except much of it isn't, e.g. techspeak like 'he/she doesn't have the bandwidth'. Also the little that is truly Bay Area slang is Oakland/Richmond/Vallejo. So, 'hella inaccurate'...
@Kevin In principle, until you get down to 'BDSM' coding-style guidelines that prescribe mindless arbitrary conventions for everything - which I hear regularly is actually common, esp. larger companies. Or places that have no standards at all, no test coverage etc. Software process is a Goldilocks quantity: too much is a straitjacket, too little is anarchy. I've seen both extremes.
@smci "BDSM coding style guidelines" sounds waaaay kinkier than they probably are.
I'm not the only person to misread that, then :P
I think they meant exactly that, as in masochism.
if so it's not a very good comparison because people rarely suffer pointless style guidelines voluntarily and consensually
23:56
@AndrasDeak It's the term used in industry for several decades now. You might as well argue that 'rubber ducking' was a bad choice of metaphor decades ago...
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