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HP labs != corporate life!
heh,
-jf
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http://richard.wilkinson.fr/?tag=fon SUCKS!!!
"Every nonfree program has a lord, a master --
and if you use the program, he is your master."
--Richard Stallman
"It's so hard to write a graphics driver that open-sourcing it would not help."
-- Andrew Fear, Software Product Manager, NVIDIA Corporation
http://kerneltrap.org/node/7228
Oy!!
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There you go. Subh can help ya recruit smart polymers.
Cheers,
Jason
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web: http://bit.ly/jasonong
Yan Gu ( http://www.hpl.hp.com/people/chloe_yan_gu ) is listed twice; maybe u can approach one of them -- why would HP need 2 guys w the same name (but the same url)!? weird, isnt it? ;D
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tom
Uh, Subh, I could also use a smart fresh grad for viki. Or two...
Rails is not required, but I need some serious JavaScript fu.
I hope I am not too late to the poaching party :)
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tom
On Saturday, February 11, 2012 at 4:39 PM, Andras Kristof wrote:
> Uh, Subh, I could also use a smart fresh grad for viki. Or two...
> Rails is not required, but I need some serious JavaScript fu.
> I hope I am not too late to the poaching party :)
> On Feb 11, 2012 2:20 AM, "Tamas Herman" <herma...@gmail.com (mailto:herma...@gmail.com)> wrote:
> > On Friday, February 10, 2012 at 1:19 PM, Khang Toh wrote:
> > > Here's a list of people you can poach =)
> > > http://www.hpl.hp.com/people/index-loc.html#Singapore
> >
> >
> > Yan Gu ( http://www.hpl.hp.com/people/chloe_yan_gu ) is listed twice; maybe u can approach one of them -- why would HP need 2 guys w the same name (but the same url)!? weird, isnt it? ;D
> >
> > --
> > tom
> >
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I suppose for those who want to climb the corporate ladder, or prefer management type work, it is an accomplishment to "make" management. However, the blanket use of the term, in my opinion, exposes a misunderstanding of software development. If all developers stopped developing after six years, what kind of software would exist in the world? The best there is comes from experienced developers -- if we think of all the languages, tools, frameworks, and operating systems we use, what would they look like without the more experienced developers' contributions? Pretty shabby, I'm sure, and not an infrastructure on which to base a business, government, or other organization.
- Keith
And most experienced developers would have made management in 4 - 6
years?!!
Wow Paul - you've thought about this one quite a lot!
Look, I'm not sure that I completely agree with the world class product needs world class team theory but I've been reading a lot of The Lean Startup recently and admit to being temporally biased in my views!
That said, I'm 100% behind you that companies and company cultures that struggle to understand the value brought by developers are almost definitely going to reward the wrong behaviour and/or provide little incentive for people to stick to a pure technical career.
<massive generalisation>
[...] I suspect they end up throwing their hands in the air in frustration with trying to stay current.
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> ...
>
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For Rails, the way we do it is to give him AWDWR4 and a simple challenge
to work on for a week. He's expected to read the book cover to cover,
type in all examples (not copy paste) and work through the book for a
while. Once that's done, he's ready to talk Rails to the rest of the
team and has garnered a collection of "best practices" ideas. After
that, it's really working on our real world stuff. In the meanwhile, we
nudge him to read stuff like "The Well-Grounded Rubyist" in parallel to
shore up Ruby skills.
Then, every now and then, we find some time in the schedules and try to
give a break for a week to learn something like RSpec or Sinatra... and
so on!
Other than that, in the earlier days, we review the code a bit more and
point out how we might approach things slightly differently taken from a
Rails (or Ruby) viewpoint.
That's worked for us - but it requires a candidate who has a willingness
to learn!
Best Regards,
Mohit.
13/2/2012 | 2:30 PM.
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Pairing is a great teaching tool on any software project. I have seen and used this ping pong approach myself on numerous projects, and agree that it works especially well with new hires regardless of their experience level or which language or framework you decide to adopt on your project.
Adrian.
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Actually, you're (all) right! This would have the extra benefit of them
learning the company style also, as Carl mentioned. Next up - we'll
pair them up for more fun and profit! Seeing this thread, I guess
there's little sense in adding that my company is looking for a couple
of seasoned Rails guys to build some cool stuff... but I'll look
elsewhere - hopefully, this thread will tell me where!
Best Regards,
Mohit.
13/2/2012 | 4:18 PM.
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