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That's a question that Steve Balmer used to ask job applicants, according to a book I'm reading right now, "Bad Boy Balmer".

The book doesn't give the answer that Balmer is looking for. It just says that he's trying to see how people think.

How would you answer this question? And how could the answer give insight into an applicant's way of thinking?

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closed as not programming related by Neil Butterworth, Mehrdad Afshari, gnovice, Zach Scrivena, redsquare Aug 23 at 7:53

10 Answers

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Here's how I answer it: My town is in Queens, a boro of NYC. Its fairly congested, but nothing like Manhattan. I figure it falls somewhere inbetween the inner city and SmallTown, USA; so its probably an OK starting point.

Population of my town is 29,000. Let's say there are 10 gas stations; that's 2900 people per gas station served.

So let's use this ratio on the population of the US:

320000000/2900 = 110344

That accounts for local gas stations, but now we need to add in gas stations on the highways and such; after all our country is pretty big. Also my town is fairly urban, so smaller towns are probably not accounted for too well in my calculation so I added a 40% fudge factor: 110344 * 1.4 = 154481.

The best number if found from a quick Google search was from 1998, "According to The Journal Of Petroleum Marketing, June, 1998 issue, there are 187,097 retail location selling motor fuel in the U.S."

I'd say I came pretty close.

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The question is banal but I like your inside-out approach. – I Have the Hat Aug 23 at 0:07
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+1 This is what I would have done if I had bothered to look up numbers. – Chris Lutz Aug 23 at 0:10
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There are four.

I looked.

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This made me laugh for some reason. I can't explain it, but you win, sir. – Chris Lutz Aug 23 at 0:14
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Yeah, and all four are on the same intersection. – Jeremy Powell Aug 23 at 1:01
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Yes, it's a typical interview question just like Mt. Fuji and others. I'm honestly not sure there's value in whatever answers are given here.

This type of question is about how you take the road to the answer; it's more about the thought process, how you split up the problem into easier-to-solve segments, and who cares what the answer is.

There is never a right answer, if N people view this page, there will be N answers, and at least N + 1 possibilities!

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I always thought the saying goes "Ask n people and you'll get n+1 answers." ;) – deceze Aug 23 at 0:19
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That is the theory, yes, under the assumption that people who dig brainteasers are somehow more likely to be better programmers and that people who don't must lack some problem solving acumen that would serve them well in programming. In truth I think brainteaser interview questions end up telling you who likes brainteasers and not much more. But then maybe that's just because I don't like them... haha. – I Have the Hat Aug 23 at 0:19
I don't mind the estimation teasers too much... as long as you explain your answer you're OK (I hope). I hate the ones that have you flipping hypothetical switches to light bulbs you can't see and other nonsense. What makes it worse is that typically the interviewer is unimaginative, so if you don't give the same exact answer as the one he "knows," then its wrong. – Giovanni Galbo Aug 23 at 0:26
Too true. Examining the estimation/extrapolation process could be beneficial for some jobs, and yes, I was thinking more of the asinine questions like that one. I'm glad they seem to be falling out of fashion. – I Have the Hat Aug 23 at 0:46
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If you're feeling brave, how about 'How is that relevant, Mr. Balmer?'

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"I tag this interview question as not-programming-related!" – las3rjock Aug 23 at 0:22
Don't forget to move all the chairs out of reach first – 1800 INFORMATION Aug 23 at 1:06
@1800INFO: Why do you think he prefaced his answer with "If you're feeling brave"? ;P – Dan Moulding Aug 23 at 2:28
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http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/GuerrillaInterviewing3.html

I suggest reading the whole article, although the part that will interest you is this:

In the past, I’ve used “impossible questions,” also known as “back of the envelope questions.” Classic examples of this are “How many piano tuners are there in Seattle?” The candidate won’t know the answer, but smart candidates won’t give up and they’ll be happy to try and estimate a reasonable number for you.

...and the explanation that comes after that.

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I was just about to post a link to that exact article. Beat me to it :-D That's a great article in general though. Definitely gave me some great ideas about how to try to conduct better job interviews. – Brent Nash Aug 23 at 3:38
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Those questions used to be really en vogue about 3-4 years ago. There's plenty of rumors about companies like Google using them too (though Google makes interviewees sign NDA's, so you never really know). I think since there's been a lot of backlash of people arguing that most of those logic puzzles don't prove a whole lot in an interview and you could spend your interview time asking much more productive questions.

If you're really interested in those types of questions/brainteasers that MS and others used to ask, along with the answers (including the answer to your particular question), check out the book "How Would You Move Mount Fuji? Microsoft's Cult of the Puzzle - How the World's Smartest Company Selects the Most Creative Thinkers":

http://www.amazon.com/Would-Move-Mount-Microsofts-Puzzle/dp/0316919160

It's an interesting read if nothing else.

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vote up 0 vote down

As many as the number of hairs on your head :)

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You'd say that to Ballmer??!? – jalbert Aug 23 at 0:16
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If the chair misses, hell yeah! – gAMBOOKa Aug 23 at 0:24
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The last I tried, I got a stackoverflow in Windows.

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vote up -1 vote down

Bing it.

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vote up -1 vote down

Wolfram it :)

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