The saga of the did-they-didn’t-they Russian cyber hacks continues. On Friday, the Office of the Director of…
The saga of the did-they-didn’t-they Russian cyber hacks continues. On Friday, the Office of the Director of…
But what about the additives to make the coal smoke act as a mind control agent? At what temperature do those burn?
Ship fuel can’t melt steel hulls.
I’m guessing that Dolan and Trump are BFFs. They sound a lot alike.
Forced labor is not a good look for a supposedly “free country.”
As a lifelong, die-hard Knicks fan, allow me to say: I would vote for Trump over James Dolan for POTUS. He is the goddamn WORST.
Who’s joking?
My work has been shown at various conventions and has been treating patients for over 6 years all over the world (Asia, US, Europe, South America, etc.) with a lot of success. I’ve always been humble in my work - they’re always someone better than you.
I’ve rarely had a specification for a data structure explained to me, at most a couple of times. I’ve always found getting any info out of their heads was a chore because they clearly didn’t expect someone to ask questions or push back in some way. Always a red flag.
Yup - that’s how I deal with it. I’ve interviewed for senior level positions (director, etc.) where they ask questions on linked lists and similar questions. Those are for new college grads and entry level engineers.
Agreed - I have that same book too. Nothing relevant to daily work, unless you like recreating the wheel. Sadly they’re typical in interviews.
I have been doing C# .NET dev for about 4.5 years. I am looking for a new position and just recently ordered Cracking the Coding Interview. Man, like 90% of the questions in that book don’t apply to daily tasks. I am starting to wonder if I can make it in the with these crazy new types of coding interviews.
I have been doing C# .NET dev for about 4.5 years. I am looking for a new position and just recently ordered Cracking the Coding Interview. Man, like 90% of the questions in that book don’t apply to daily tasks. I am starting to wonder if I can make it in the with these crazy new types of coding interviews.
Skiplist - damn I had to look that up. Never heard of it, and it was apparently invented in 1990, so I think I would’ve heard something about it at some point.
I interviewed at Amazon Business here in Austin last fall, and they do pretty much everything in Java. They were also looking for people who were fungible, so as long as you had a similar language (I hadn’t coded in Java in 15 years, but my C# was current, so it would have been more or less a lateral shift), you were…
Trump fanboy Scott Baio, whose wife Renee once referred to the staff of Jezebel as “lesbian shitasses” and who …
“I like reporters who don’t faint.” *shrug*