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I usually just use linkedin
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# ? Sep 9, 2022 00:58 |
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# ? May 31, 2024 07:24 |
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America Inc. posted:Has anyone here used Hired to find jobs? I'm currently looking for a Front-End Web job. For me, I think Hired would be useful just to get a larger potential pool of companies I can apply for. I have, their platform doesn't do remote great and I've got a suspicion that companies are getting access to the min salary field somehow. It's not a bad way to find employers in the 50-200 range if that's your interest.
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# ? Sep 9, 2022 02:17 |
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Looking for some advice on getting into software engineering- I’m a licensed/certified healthcare worker (lab, not md/rn), currently work in an analyst IT role in a hospital with 5yoe, but I feel like it’s a dead end in both skills/career development and pay. I’m currently in part time school for an IT master’s, and am changing my focus to include more coding/software dev courses because it is apparently fun for me. I end up coding on my lunch break because I genuinely like to. I’ve been messing around with Javascript and React and really like it, but I’ve got no idea what ‘good enough’ is in order to work as a junior developer. I’ve written a couple single page React app sites but don’t know where to go from here. I guess I’m just hazy on where my skills should be in order to do this professionally. I’ve snagged some projects from our informatics/internal software group and can hopefully try out some light Python/data science work (I have a rusty background in linear algebra/stats that I’ve never gotten to use professionally), but I’m at a loss as to how and when to make the jump if this connection doesn’t pan out. Any advice? I feel like I just have this mishmash of background that should be helpful but falls short of being convincing to employers.
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# ? Sep 9, 2022 13:42 |
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Can you use Javascript/React/whatever to do some automation at your current job? Using that to tell a story about how you accomplished something faster and more reliably will go way farther than saying you took some programming classes
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# ? Sep 9, 2022 14:27 |
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BadSamaritan posted:I’ve got no idea what ‘good enough’ is in order to work as a junior developer. I’ve written a couple single page React app sites This is most likely good enough. Polish them up a bit, post your resume (and apps if you want) here for some critique, do some studying on LeetCode so you know how to solve common interview problems, and start applying!
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# ? Sep 9, 2022 14:40 |
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I would work on polishing your python skills, they are in demand, and will pay better in the long run, JavaScript and react will get you pigeonholed as a front end dev, which is better than QA but not a lot
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 03:30 |
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Hadlock posted:front end dev, which is better than QA but not a lot This viewpoint comes up in this thread here and there and it’s complete nonsense. Frontend work is in super high demand and people who can do it well are rare and paid accordingly.
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 04:19 |
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Harriet Carker posted:This viewpoint comes up in this thread here and there and it’s complete nonsense. Frontend work is in super high demand and people who can do it well are rare and paid accordingly. Agree pretty strongly on this. I'm a "full stack" developer in the sense that I can muddle through front end work and do a lovely job at it. I'd kill to have a competent front end person who could do far better work in a quarter of the time it would take me.
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 04:25 |
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Harriet Carker posted:people who can do [front end work] well are rare and paid accordingly. I don't disagree with this statement For every front end principal, though, there are 10+ monkeys changing colors of buttons and fonts to meet accessibility standards Principals get paid well regardless of what they're doing, usually, I'm not sure that's a profound statement
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 04:34 |
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Being a lead front end person is fun because building interfaces is fun. Building api integrations is boring.
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 05:17 |
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all the fiddly, mind numbing poo poo you have to do to make a smooth, polished interface? gently caress all that tbh
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 06:19 |
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Thanks everyone. I’m working on polishing up what I’ve worked on and I’ll try testing the waters. Definitely have to practice leetcode stuff because right now it’s pretty difficult for me. And as to frontend vs Python, that’s kind of a reflection of what I feel I don’t know about this field as work vs as a self-directed project. Right now I’m liking frontend because it feels more ‘complete’- I can go from an idea to something with an interface that looks ‘real’ from my perspective as a user. But it obviously has its limitations and I don’t know how that will change my perspective on it long-term. Regardless, I think it’ll be easier to make career shifts from active work inside the field than from where I am now, so I’m trying to avoid overthinking it at this point.
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 12:18 |
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redleader posted:all the fiddly, mind numbing poo poo you have to do to make a smooth, polished interface? gently caress all that tbh no it's fun actually
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 14:06 |
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Hadlock posted:For every front end principal, though, there are 10+ monkeys changing colors of buttons and fonts to meet accessibility standards And they still get paid a ton more than their non-programmer peers. JavaScript monkeys are in high demand.
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# ? Sep 10, 2022 15:48 |
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Everything about being pigeon-holed into front-end work loving owns. I can't say I'd ever want to be principal, though, so I'm biased. A whole lotta work there, and for what? A shitload of money? Come on.
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# ? Sep 12, 2022 21:33 |
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I don't mind back-end programming but gently caress devops/infra stuff. Opening the AWS console makes me want to die.
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# ? Sep 12, 2022 21:40 |
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prom candy posted:I don't mind back-end programming but gently caress devops/infra stuff. Opening the AWS console makes me want to die. I’m a front end dev on the AWS console home page haha. I guess you mean more actually using AWS services than a specific problem with the console?
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# ? Sep 12, 2022 22:08 |
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Vincent Valentine posted:Everything about being pigeon-holed into front-end work loving owns. I can't say I'd ever want to be principal, though, so I'm biased. A whole lotta work there, and for what? A shitload of money? Come on. lol @ principal being more work. unless your principal engineers have to do HR bullshit/managerial stuff, in which case they really are the worst job in all software, the software development manager.
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 03:29 |
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Harriet Carker posted:
Yeah it's not that I hate the console in particular, I think it does the best it can with the job it has. I just hate messing with dev ops stuff and AWS is really complicated. Definitely can't blame the front end team for how Amazon structures its offering. It's more that when I open the console it means I'm about to spend an hour or two staring at poo poo that I don't understand and don't particularly want to understand.
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 04:47 |
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If you're manually maintaining infra on your cloud provider's console you're doing it wrong. Learn infra-as-code and use terraform, life will be better. You will still occasionally lose half a day to random bullshit, but it will be way better.
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 11:44 |
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Daviclond posted:If you're manually maintaining infra on your cloud provider's console you're doing it wrong. Learn infra-as-code and use terraform, life will be better. You will still occasionally lose half a day to random bullshit, but it will be way better. This. I suck at DevOps so when I deployed a change to Dev, I broke something. I debugged it, found the issue and changed the missing config manually on the deployed Dev service instead of updating the pipeline and redeploying. Then, long enough passed by the time it went to QA that the same issue happened, I forgot and re-debugged it, re-found the issue and I again updated it manually. Then on release day, of course it's loving broken on prod. If I just changed the loving pipelines from jump street, I would have saved us all tons of pain.
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 12:42 |
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Daviclond posted:If you're manually maintaining infra on your cloud provider's console you're doing it wrong. Learn infra-as-code and use terraform, life will be better. You will still occasionally lose half a day to random bullshit, but it will be way better. I also hate terraform. I just don't like doing devops but I always work at tiny companies and so I end up having to do it. I like wearing a lot of hats, just not that one.
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 16:59 |
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I'm a backend guy. My favorite jobs are the ones that allow me to be a backend code monkey. Frontend? I dislike Javascript. Waiting for front end Java to make a come back (Vaadin? WebAssembly?) Devops? I hate having to thing about deployments/config.
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 17:50 |
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Daviclond posted:If you're manually maintaining infra on your cloud provider's console you're doing it wrong. Learn infra-as-code and use terraform, life will be better. You will still occasionally lose half a day to random bullshit, but it will be way better. I mean technically it's sustainable for about a year before you get burnt out and quit, or you need a specific level of job security and you're the only one who knows how to fix it I'm not a huge fan of terraform but it does a pretty good job of maintaining very stateful infrastructure, there are some custom stuff like pulumi that allows you to wrap your terraform providers in stuff like python, go Infra as code means your $2 billion a year company can be run from a group of 2-5 people rather than scale linearly to a division of like 30 people. The sre group to keep Gmail up and running is like six people I'm glad you guys don't like doing devops, I'll keep cashing those paychecks
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 18:04 |
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Hadlock posted:I'm glad you guys don't like doing devops, I'll keep cashing those paychecks What's your consulting fee?
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# ? Sep 13, 2022 18:30 |
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Hadlock posted:The sre group to keep Gmail up and running is like six people Really? Like, before I start using this anecdote all over the place… Really?
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 00:46 |
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That could be technically true due to something about the way Google manages its SREs but I'm thinking it comes with a pretty big asterisk.
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 00:54 |
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It doesn't include the SREs that manage the underlying services that Gmail is built on top of.
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 01:06 |
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lifg posted:Really? No I'm just guessing. It is a mature Google service though and likely dictates/ed a lot of the Borg design. That you can imagine it though, sort of illustrates the power of infrastructure as code though prom candy posted:What's your consulting fee? Pretty decent but not pulling down L5 tc googs yet
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 04:41 |
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Hadlock posted:No I'm just guessing. It is a mature Google service though and likely dictates/ed a lot of the Borg design. That you can imagine it though, sort of illustrates the power of infrastructure as code though Ah, still neat. I would believe any story I heard about Google SRE. From an outsiders perspective, their whole world looks amazing.
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 16:38 |
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Hadlock posted:This is my preferred system design cheatsheet I studied the materials in this repo and rocked my backend jr dev technical. Took me about a week of hard cramming to get the material tailored for short-term studying and then I did a mock interview with someone.
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 18:43 |
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Bruegels Fuckbooks posted:lol @ principal being more work. unless your principal engineers have to do HR bullshit/managerial stuff, in which case they really are the worst job in all software, the software development manager. At the places I've worked, the principal engineers have two major things that separate them from the regular engineers. First: Any time there is an emergency, it's their problem. Second: Endless meetings. I like just getting my dumb little tickets at the start of a sprint and doing my dumb little tickets over the next week or two and that if I finish early I can clock out early without having to be prepared to go to more meetings or put out a fire.
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 22:35 |
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Do they at least get to delegate the emergencies?
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# ? Sep 14, 2022 22:59 |
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What sites would you guys recommend for doing mock interviews? Edit: I'm looking at interviewing.io and pramp, and the prices they charge for mock interviews - ouch! America Inc. fucked around with this message at 02:01 on Sep 15, 2022 |
# ? Sep 15, 2022 01:55 |
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ultrafilter posted:Do they at least get to delegate the emergencies? Yeah, I've been delegated too occasionally but tbh they almost always just handle it themselves. I don't know if that's out of courtesy or just because they believe they shouldn't unless they absolutely have to. I've only worked at two companies, though, so your mileage may vary.
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# ? Sep 15, 2022 07:04 |
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America Inc. posted:What sites would you guys recommend for doing mock interviews? Pick a few places you're not interested in. Real practice is free.
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# ? Sep 15, 2022 07:41 |
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has anyone had success getting a unity developer job? junior/entry level, whatever. i worked as a dev briefly but it was about 4 years ago and unity is the only thing i've really kept up with in that time, so i'm pretty good with that and would be starting from much farther back with anything else. i mean i can write c# code but i don't really know .net, forgot what i did know. it seems like it would be a job i'd like to do, but i'm not sure how easy it is to get a job working in unity. so that's why i ask if anybody is working as a unity dev, has, or is also seeking.
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# ? Sep 15, 2022 14:45 |
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Vincent Valentine posted:I like just getting my dumb little tickets at the start of a sprint and doing my dumb little tickets over the next week or two and that if I finish early I can clock out early without having to be prepared to go to more meetings or put out a fire. My manager asked me this week where I see myself in 5 years and honestly, this but with mentoring juniors. I want to be important enough to not lay off but not so important that I’m in endless meetings or can’t take a vacation and can get about 3 hours a day without any Slack notifications.
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# ? Sep 15, 2022 15:42 |
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Vincent Valentine posted:First: Any time there is an emergency, it's their problem. Correct, that's my job. It's effectively glorified third level support. But I don't go to any regular meetings - because I just deal with emergencies, what's the point of a scrum meeting? All I do are emergencies, code review, proof of concept code, and white papers on technical direction. No scrum meetings, no checking anything into production, no deadlines, no routine bullshit.
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# ? Sep 15, 2022 17:26 |
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# ? May 31, 2024 07:24 |
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roomtone posted:has anyone had success getting a unity developer job? junior/entry level, whatever. I manage teams of unity developers. No open headcount at the moment though. You'll almost certainly have a tech interview in C#, probably using hackerrank or similar. Any concrete questions?
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# ? Sep 15, 2022 20:44 |