https://vc.ru/life/264735-nekotorym-bolshe-nravitsya-sozdavat-s-nulya-ukrainskiy-razrabotchik-ushel-s-raboty-i-ves-god-sozdaval-prostye-servisy
«Некоторым больше нравится создавать с нуля»: украинский разработчик ушёл с работы и весь год создавал простые сервисы
«Некоторым больше нравится создавать с нуля»: украинский разработчик ушёл с работы и весь год создавал простые сервисы
vc.ru
«Некоторым больше нравится создавать с нуля»: украинский разработчик ушёл с работы и весь год создавал простые сервисы — Личный…
История Андрея Азимова, который хотел стабильно получать $1000 в месяц и недавно продал генератор сайтов из «Google Таблиц».
#interview #prep #guide
13 лет давности, но все еще актуально. На тему подготовки к интеврью в Гугл (и другие топы)
http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2008/03/get-that-job-at-google.html
13 лет давности, но все еще актуально. На тему подготовки к интеврью в Гугл (и другие топы)
http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2008/03/get-that-job-at-google.html
#interview #mock
Вначале он говорит, что она не компететив программист, хотя по решению которое она сразу предлагает (на мой взгляд, без детального проблем солвинга, а больше на интуиции и опыте) и как она пишет код, плюс выборя язка, очень похоже на то, что она как раз таки практикующий компететив программист.
Интересная задачка и решение.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rw4s4M3hFfs
Вначале он говорит, что она не компететив программист, хотя по решению которое она сразу предлагает (на мой взгляд, без детального проблем солвинга, а больше на интуиции и опыте) и как она пишет код, плюс выборя язка, очень похоже на то, что она как раз таки практикующий компететив программист.
Интересная задачка и решение.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rw4s4M3hFfs
YouTube
Google Coding Interview With A Normal Software Engineer
In this video, I conduct a mock Google coding interview with a normal software engineer, Keerti Purswani, who's a software developer based in India. As a Google Software Engineer, I interviewed dozens of candidates. This is exactly the type of coding interview…
Хорошая статья на тему negotiating your salary
https://haseebq.com/my-ten-rules-for-negotiating-a-job-offer/
https://haseebq.com/my-ten-rules-for-negotiating-a-job-offer/
haseeb qureshi
Ten Rules for Negotiating a Job Offer
When the story of how I landed a job at Airbnb went viral, I was surprised at how infatuated people were with my negotiations. Media stories portrayed me as some kind of master negotiator—a wily ex...
https://vc.ru/tribuna/265080-kak-iskat-vakansii-razrabotchiku-zarubezhom-ili-kak-my-prodali-dushu-za-vakansii
Как искать вакансии разработчику зарубежом или как мы продали душу за вакансии
Как искать вакансии разработчику зарубежом или как мы продали душу за вакансии
vc.ru
Как искать вакансии разработчику зарубежом или как мы продали душу за вакансии — Трибуна на vc.ru
Привет! Я Александр, многим знаком по содержательным статьям о том, как нанимать людей через хакатоны. Я люблю создавать небольшие стартапы и одной из идей появилась создать Сатана Джобс – сервис, который помогает закрыть эти чёртовы горящие вакансии в IT…
Forwarded from DevBrain
Курсы по Redis стали доступны в режиме self-paced обучения бесплатно: https://university.redislabs.com/
Forwarded from Sysadmin Tools 🇺🇦
GrowthBook
#bigquery #statistics #clickhouse #snowflake #redshift
The Open Source A/B Testing Platform
#bigquery #statistics #clickhouse #snowflake #redshift
Amazon's Working Backwards - great methodology to innovate.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFdpBqmDpzM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFdpBqmDpzM
YouTube
AWS re:Invent 2020: Working backwards: Amazon’s approach to innovation
“Working backwards” is the peculiar, customer-centric mechanism that lies at the heart of every product and service we develop at Amazon. Join this session to learn more about how we use five customer questions and the press release and FAQ (PR-FAQ) format…
Forwarded from Nodir's notebook
I must clarify that my interest is frameworks/libraries and developer tools, where *the customer is a developer*. My first piece of generic reusable code was a rainbow-colored button control in Delphi when I was ~14. At NetDec (Tashkent) I led the team to create UZTO framework, a la 1C:Enterprise in C#. Then at ComponentOne, the whole business is to sell software components, e.g. supercharged DataGrid for .NET. Those years my ultimate dream was to live in Redmond and work on .NET or Visual Studio. Then I joined Google where the job is to create the developer infrastructure used by Chrome engineers. I also fell in love with Go, hence the dream to join the Go team; but that didn't work out.
I learned that the higher you go in the career/level, the more it is important to work in a domain you care about. This is because at Staff+ level an engineer no longer can just write code or design systems, but must think about the business side - which is hard if you don't care about the domain of the business. For example, I don't want to go to Facebook or Netflix because I don't care about social networks or movies that much. Chrome isn't perfect either: people come here because they care about the *Web* - this ended up being the main limiting factor of growth in my team.
With such narrow speciality, there isn't a lot of choice really: if I don't know about a product, then it is probably not interesting. Also, the more developers use tool/framework, the better; this basically narrows down the choice to the most popular frameworks and tools. There are not a lot of teams like that, so where do I go?
To be continued...
I learned that the higher you go in the career/level, the more it is important to work in a domain you care about. This is because at Staff+ level an engineer no longer can just write code or design systems, but must think about the business side - which is hard if you don't care about the domain of the business. For example, I don't want to go to Facebook or Netflix because I don't care about social networks or movies that much. Chrome isn't perfect either: people come here because they care about the *Web* - this ended up being the main limiting factor of growth in my team.
With such narrow speciality, there isn't a lot of choice really: if I don't know about a product, then it is probably not interesting. Also, the more developers use tool/framework, the better; this basically narrows down the choice to the most popular frameworks and tools. There are not a lot of teams like that, so where do I go?
To be continued...
#amazon #leadership #principles
Importance of Amazon's LP "Deep Dive" for Engineers.
You ONCE spend slightly more time to understand how something works and then uses this knowledge as a super power. The easiest way to train this skill is to dig something you do not understand asking 5 Why's. Each time you ask Why you deepen your expertise and gradually get expertise to influence others with the knowledge. It works - I proved it myself several times at Amazon
Importance of Amazon's LP "Deep Dive" for Engineers.
You ONCE spend slightly more time to understand how something works and then uses this knowledge as a super power. The easiest way to train this skill is to dig something you do not understand asking 5 Why's. Each time you ask Why you deepen your expertise and gradually get expertise to influence others with the knowledge. It works - I proved it myself several times at Amazon
Forwarded from Software Engineer Updates
Forwarded from Software Engineer Updates
For those who prepare for System Design interviews, this vid can be useful. It discusses types of DBs