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- Relax. Breath deepBreathe deeply. ExcerciseExercise. Run a few miles the morning before the interview. (rest deleted)
- When I'm interviewing I try to talk roughly 30% of the time and I expect the interviewee to take up the rest. If you feel like you're going on too long, ask the interviewer a question. I wouldn't talk for more than 3 minutes solid unless I was going through a programming problem.
- Problem solving skills. Pick 3-4 really fun problems you did on your prior job and be preparred prepared to talk about them. Make sure you have them down pat. I'd learn more about them than I did when I was actually solving them.
- What is the work environment like? What type of testing do you do? Do you believe in unit tests? How are check-ins gated? (Can you tell I like testing :) ).
- Take a different angle. I'm looking for new oppurtunitiesopportunities. I feel like I've grown stagnant in my previous job and I want to expand.
- Use #3 to help you out. Pick really good problems and be preparred prepared to go into them in depth.
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Post Made Community Wiki by Community♦
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occurred Jan 20 '09 at 14:29
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edited Nov 30 '08 at 22:54
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This seems like a joke, but if you're of age, have a beer awhile before the interview - Relax. Not enough to get a buzzBreath deep. Just one, it's often enough to relax you a bit for the interviewExcercise.
Please read this in Run a few miles the appropriate context. The questioner says they get so nervous they are visibly shaking during morning before the interviewamong other things. Desperate problems often necesetate desparate measures. I'm not saying this is the solution for everyone. But if you're desparate, it may help. (rest deleted)
- When I'm interviewing I try to talk roughly 30% of the time and I expect the interviewee to take up the rest. If you feel like you're going on too long, ask the interviewer a question. I wouldn't talk for more than 3 minutes solid unless I was going through a programming problem
- Problem solving skills. Pick 3-4 really fun problems you did on your prior job and be preparred to talk about them. Make sure you have them down pat. I'd learn more about them than I did when I was actually solving them.
- What is the work environment like? What type of testing do you do? Do you believe in unit tests? How are check-ins gated? (Can you tell I like testing :) ).
- Take a different angle. I'm looking for new oppurtunities. I feel like I've grown stagnant in my previous job and I want to expand.
- Use #3 to help you out. Pick really good problems and be preparred to go into them in depth.
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edited Nov 30 '08 at 22:10
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This seems like a joke, but if you're of age, have a beer/shotbeer awhile before the interview. Not enough to get a buzz. Just one, it's often enough to relax you a bit for the interview.
Please read this in the appropriate context. The questioner says they get so nervous they are visibly shaking during the interview among other things. Desperate problems often necesetate desparate measures. I'm not saying this is the solution for everyone. But if you're desparate, it may help.
- When I'm interviewing I try to talk roughly 30% of the time and I expect the interviewee to take up the rest. If you feel like you're going on too long, ask the interviewer a question. I wouldn't talk for more than 3 minutes solid unless I was going through a programming problem.
- Problem solving skills. Pick 3-4 really fun problems you did on your prior job and be preparred to talk about them. Make sure you have them down pat. I'd learn more about them than I did when I was actually solving them.
- What is the work environment like? What type of testing do you do? Do you believe in unit tests? How are check-ins gated? (Can you tell I like testing :) ).
- Take a different angle. I'm looking for new oppurtunities. I feel like I've grown stagnant in my previous job and I want to expand.
- Use #3 to help you out. Pick really good problems and be preparred to go into them in depth.
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answered Nov 30 '08 at 20:21
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- This seems like a joke, but if you're of age, have a beer/shot. Not enough to get a buzz. Just one, it's enough to relax you a bit for the interview.
- When I'm interviewing I try to talk roughly 30% of the time and I expect the interviewee to take up the rest. If you feel like you're going on too long, ask the interviewer a question. I wouldn't talk for more than 3 minutes solid unless I was going through a programming problem.
- Problem solving skills. Pick 3-4 really fun problems you did on your prior job and be preparred to talk about them. Make sure you have them down pat. I'd learn more about them than I did when I was actually solving them.
- What is the work environment like? What type of testing do you do? Do you believe in unit tests? How are check-ins gated? (Can you tell I like testing :) ).
- Take a different angle. I'm looking for new oppurtunities. I feel like I've grown stagnant in my previous job and I want to expand.
- Use #3 to help you out. Pick really good problems and be preparred to go into them in depth.
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