If you're hiring developers, there are two types of interviews and they depend on the experience level of the developer you want.
If you're hiring someone straight out of school or their first job as a developer, then you have to find out if they technically know what you're talking about and some of the previous responses address that.
However, if you're looking for experience, trying to test them in the interview process by asking for code or pseudo-code is a complete waste of time. If you're looking for an experienced developer, and I say this as having been on both sides of the desk and having started my career 30 years ago, there are at least two things more important than asking someone questions with syntax answers:
1) Check their references. See how they were in previous jobs. You want to know what kind of employee they were? Ask the people that used to work with them.
2) Ask META questions. The technicals details are NOTHING if the person isn't good at problem analysis or can't get along on a development team. Ask for HOW they would solve a problem, not what code they'd write to solve it.
This is all far more important than if they can write the most efficient sorting algorithm.
I've had people ask a couple of technical questions on phone screens and that's not too bad, depending on how many people you're sorting through and how much experience they should have. There's certainly nothing wrong with asking questions like "Have you ever used .NET remoting and, if so, how?" But taking time to to set up meetings, clearing people's schedules and wasting some of that time physically writing code? That's slow and inefficient to say nothing of the old "ask 10 programmers to code a routine" problem - how do you judge the results?
Talk to the person. Get a better feel for who they are. Ask them what challenges they overcame in previous positions and how they worked through it. How did they work together with other members of the team? What tools were used? Did they ever have to learn completely new tools without supervision? Do they know when to stop beating their heads against a brick wall and ask for help?