mindedone
MindedOne
mindedone

This may have been already stated, but the best answer to “what is your greatest weakness” is your honest weakness, with a detailed plan on how you are trying to overcome it.

At my school, network architecture classes are EE. Communications falls under EE for us.

Maybe he'll be Akira?

Let me preface this by stating I my job used to be to test chargers and batteries for a wireless provider.

I almost ALWAYS send an email in addition to a faster method of communication. Digital trail forever.

Do you love your job?

The GV number rings in both dialers

I have the newest software, seen updates on Hangouts and GV, but I still see no option to text using my GV number. I see the settings options to receive incoming GV calls, but haven't tested that yet.

I went to University of Pittsburgh, and at the time they ran the Semester at Sea program. A few of my friends went and said it was an amazing experience. I, on the other hand, decided to spend a year in Brazil. I'm sure I needn't say that I had an awesome time as well.

I thought you could send private messages, but I couldn't figure it out on my phone, do you mind if I ask you questions about your background here?

Ok, working for Qualcomm makes much more sense. I worked for ALU and currently work for VZW, but I studied chipset design in undergrad, down the street (figuratively) from one of Qualcomm's offices (you can probably guess where based on my two other jobs).

I'm not sure it makes sense to have a small cell listed in the neighbor list of a macro cell. There probably aren't many intercell handoffs.

That is true: HOWEVER, grades are extremely important to get into med school, and a biomedical engineering degree will possibly lead to worse grades.

Why do you think it was because of a contractual agreement?

I don't know you or your background, but I feel like you've never worked as a CSR for any significant length of time. I have not met a single person who has ever worked in that capacity who HASN'T felt that way. But we smiled anyway, and did our jobs. I correct myself: the ones who worked as CSRs without this story

I haven't read the article yet, but if the picture is any indication, the most important trait is a good wireless signal.

I have to assume you mean improperly made cables, as the USB spec has maximum voltage drop requirements for cables, and if they had improper pinouts they wouldn't even work.

Cables don't do anything to regulate voltage or current. This happens on the controllers of the charger/device/battery. With cables, they only need to be thick enough to carry the required current without overheating, but they don't regulate anything.

The battery circuitry itself will not stop it from being charged at 1.2A for the majority of battery capacities. Usually it's the device itself that will stop it from being charged at higher C rates. Most batteries will keep themselves from being charged at around a 2C-rate to 2.5C-rate for safety reasons, but as

When you said heyday of Capoeira, I assumed you meant roughly around the turn of the 20th century after Brazil's enslaved Africans gained their freedom. Am I wrong? I can't imagine doing much else in Brazil at that time besides forests.