Next_Position_Please

joined 1 year ago
[–] Next_Position_Please@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

To piggyback on this... so many people have added permanent LED lights to the outside of their houses (at least in our area). It used to be fun to see a house or two lit up with current holiday colors, or sports team colors. But now there are several on each block, and they have become much brighter. On the 4th we were up on a hill watching fireworks and there was a lot of competition from the LED houses.

You could try Brain.fm. It’s supposed to help focus, but I’m not sure it helps any more than other ambient music.

I second SomaFM. But I’m more of a Groove Salad listener.

I was expecting it to be cake

There are a ton of good challenges on leetcode. I'd use a [virtual] whiteboard and have the candidate ask questions. When I'm hiring, I want engineers who can ask clarifying questions. I don't want someone who takes an incomplete set of requirements and goes off and builds what they think is the solution. I prefer they use pseudo code and not worry about syntax. Their IDE of choice would correct the minutia. I once had a candidate ask me if I thought design pattern X would be a good fit for the solution. Excellent question. That shows me they are thinking critically about the problem and open to peer input.

If you go with the programming puzzle type challenge, have a few in your repertoire. I've seen candidates totally blank on puzzle A, but rock puzzle B and vice-versa.

Things that have turned me off in interviews:

  • ask me to write code in a specific language, then nit pick spacing, exact syntax, etc. They can fuck right off. I'm not working for your micromanaging ass.
  • invite me to a 1 hour interview with HR, 1 hour interview with my potential boss, followed by a two hour technical interview. After about 2 hours, I'm done, and need a break. A 30h take home would be a hard pass.

Good luck on the hiring process!

One way to keep your locks from sounding like they are struggling is to invest in some 1.5V rechargeable batteries. They have a different chemistry than regular rechargeable batteries, but put out 1.5V per battery instead of 1.2V. Like most rechargeables, they maintain the voltage until they die suddenly. I just set a reminder on my calendar to charge them once every two months. They also work well in security systems.

[–] Next_Position_Please@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I disagree. My locks have a keypad, so I can give out codes to friends & family that I can control and revoke. If I gave them a key, they could copy it, lose it, etc.

When I set my alarm for the evening, the script will shut the garage doors if they are open, and lock all the locks if they aren't already.

I guess it could be said they can be hacked. But as someone mentioned above, regular locks can be picked. Back up your locks with a nice security system.