active questions tagged interview+jobs - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-17T05:03:35Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/interview+jobs http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1917568/what-does-the-schedule-during-the-first-few-days-look-like-for-new-hires-in-your 2 What does the schedule during the first few days look like for new hires in your company? [closed] Stefan 2009-12-16T20:45:26Z 2009-12-16T21:43:09Z <p>We are in the process of hiring a new .NET web developer and I was wondering how to give him the best start in our company.</p> <p>How do you start off new employees? Do you immediately give them code to work on? Do you give them documents to read (Coding Conventions etc.)? Or do you give them a very high level overview of all the projects your working on?</p> <p>I'm looking for programming-related answers. I know that he will have to deal with paperwork and get his machine set up etc. I'm interested in where you go from there.</p> <p>Also, would the schedule look differently for someone who will be working remotely after the first one or two days?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1760748/why-do-i-lately-have-to-be-a-master-of-big-o-sorting-searching-trees-graphs 2 Why do I lately have to be a master of big-O, sorting, searching, trees, graphs, large scale efficient data processing algorithms? [closed] wizard@ 2009-11-19T03:41:59Z 2009-11-19T04:42:24Z <p>I haven't interviewed for about a decade. Back when I got the job it was mostly about how well I knew a programming language, where my experience was, what I am good at/bad at, some simple coding problems, you know the most typical questions were asked. Now I go for technical interviews, all the companies don't care anymore what kind of experience I have, or that I am very good at struts, jsp, java, C++, Spring, perl, J2EE, javascript, http, .... All they seem to care about is data structures and algorithms. I have been doing great in my job the whole decade and well admired and appreciated, I haven't done bad in my job. I know for being innovative one has to know computer science fundamentals, but that alone isn't good, or is it? Is it the Internet that changed the scene or companies like Google and Facebook that changed the scene?</p> <p>Ok people, I understand my realization is accurate from all your answers. If I knew how I would close this question.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1706168/things-a-newbie-should-learn-to-get-a-job-at-google -4 Things a newbie should learn to get a job at Google [closed] Avis 2009-11-10T07:25:57Z 2009-11-10T16:02:18Z <p>Hi I'm a newbie to the IT field coming from a non-cs background. I always had my interests in CS &amp; I have basic technical knowledge that got me where I am now. I'd like to try for a job at Google after a couple of years or much later. Can you guys share from your years of experience as to what I could learn &amp; do to be successful in that? </p> <p>Although I have mentioned Google here out of the sheer attraction I've had for them over the years, I want to know what I can do to par up with people from CS background within that time frame to get a better job at companies like Google. </p> <p>EDIT: I forgot to mention that I did do my research before posting my question here. That I should know algorithms, have a deep knowledge in C &amp; Java/python. I thought I'd get a few more pointers here. BTW, this is my first question here so I'm sorry if I've violated any rules</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1694002/should-i-ask-the-interviewer-if-i-can-speak-to-other-developers 31 Should i ask the interviewer if i can speak to other developers? cottsak 2009-11-07T18:45:25Z 2009-11-07T22:06:33Z <p>I've always thought that whether i loved or hated a role that i would be objective enough to help out a fellow dev if he ever wanted general info about a workplace/role - say he was in for an interview/walkthru.</p> <p>As a job seeker, is (1) ok to ask the interviewer/company for permission to contact devs to ask them questions or (2) in a walkthru is it ok to just cold-ask other staff questions about how the workplace runs (general/social/business/technical)? Is this rude or OK? Should it be encouraged? I just want to know how to get that inside info that the interviewer might hide.</p> <p>What is ok? What is not? What have you tried in the past that has/not worked?</p>