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I love to see how this works in practice. Most jobs seem to be gated by various interviews and maybe panels. At lower levels it doesnt seem knowing someone is an advantage beyond avoiding the circular file. Smashing the interview seems key. I have seen at higher levels (higher EM levels) yeah people move as a tribe.


Anecdote from me: I jumped from leading an engineering team for an online virtual events company to working as a solutions engineer for a WebRTC vendor.

They asked for a reference from my previous CEO.

I had left on good terms (gave 4 weeks' notice) and was incredibly professional while working with the previous CEO, so I got a glowing reference. If I had been an ass, it'd be unlikely I'd have gotten such a great reference and got this job. ~6 months later, we even scored my previous CEO as a customer.

The tech world is SMALL. Especially if you niche down career-wise, it's possible to find yourself in a situation where only a couple hundred people worldwide have the same expertise as you. At that level, people would instead work with people they know or have strong references from people they know.


Fun story: I quit my previous job due to health reasons (as far as everyone there knew). I later hear from a friend who works there that during the retro the CEO just said "He couldn't handle the small amount of work that was on his plate." I had never had a one on one with this guy since I started working. He didn't exit interview me. Just a piece of shit truly.


He must have been terrified that people would follow. That’s one of the things about the workplace - the second you’re out the door you don’t matter. He even had the temerity to show everyone around you how they’d be treated if they left. Culture of authority and fear. It’ll come to every company eventually (and spreads like wildfire whenever people hire from Amazon)


Two people I know, one friend and one family member, landed jobs this year in a tough market due to the reputation they had built for themselves.

The friend is a programmer. He used to work in CGI, gained a reputation in animated film, and decided to leave it. People he had known for years convinced him to apply for a role in gaming. He wasn't a typical candidate, but the insiders he knew vouched for his skills and volunteered to onboard him, so he effectively switched industries.

The family member is a nurse. She holds an NP with a midwifery specialization. She was based in a large Western city and couldn't land a job for many months after she got her license. Every clinic wanted someone with 1-2 years one the job experienced.

When she finally applied for a role in the small mountain town where she had done her clinical training, the people she had interned for put their reputations on the line with the folks hiring at the clinic. The job offer documents were ready before she walked out of her interview.

These people are both conscientious and hard workers, but they were each making a leap of sorts. One to a new sector that also needed his skills, and another starting her career and in need of a couple years training post diploma. In both cases, people who had the ear of the hiring manager staked their repuations so that they would be hired.


You can tell people the 30k ft version but you wont get the lines of code, or the smart operators needed to keep the system running for that matter. Data science, dev, ops etc.


> We provide a detailed description of our betting experience to illustrate how the sports gambling industry compensates these market inefficiencies with discriminatory practices against successful clients.

Correct. I have written that code in a past life. Some clients get rate limited. Keep their bets as a nudge to check your odds. Poor big betters (these days called whales) get taken out to dinner.

Also worked on the other side and you can avoid being shutdown by using 2 sided markets. Pools, betfair, crypto, for example.


Every team needs a one-nine (CB channel for chat/truckers)


what happens on that channel?


    ♫ ♪ ♬  
    It was the dark of the moon
    On the sixth of June
    In a Kenworth, pullin' logs
    Cabover Pete with a reefer on
    And a Jimmy haulin' hogs
    We was headin' for bear
    On 'I-1-0
    'Bout a mile out Shakey Town
    I says, Pig Pen this here's the Rubber Duck
    And I'm about to put the hammer down
    ♫ ♪ ♬




lot lizards


In addition slack search becomes a great onboarding tool.


I'm sure there's features here or in progress where you'll be able to ask for an AI summary of all the recent discussion and decisions made on different topics.


I would love to know the answer? I wonder if Prometheus and Grafana would work at this light level of compute?


Pretend you are prepping for a design interview then consume all the material necessary to learn that.


Or pin the thread to top 5 articles while the bar is in effect.


Don't worry: what you truly love is a moving target as no one stays still. No 40 year old is like themselves at 30 or 20, or will be at 50.


What hours are you doing now and (if you want to answer) why so many?


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