I need to show people I work with how little hardware you can use to serve this much traffic. We do around 500/second but our monthly EC2 spend is horrendous for the scale of traffic we get. But rails is what it is...
I think you have it all covered, but are there ways people can contribute with time? I'm mostly k8s focused these days though.
Not surprising. There's a part of the Shopify careers site that has a letter you have to acknowledge that says (paraphrased): Care more about the ability to sell than what people sell, and if feel you might disagree with what people sell then this isn't the workplace for you. They really drill that point home on the site and in interviews, not surprising their stance is 'no comment'.
The UK has been right up there on the highest number of cameras per person in the world, this isn't surprising. They've been at the forefront of this before China took the records.
Absolutely ran into fake CVs and people farming off the interview to 3rd party interview factories. Not at all surprised this was happening. Can't say I ran into North Koreans but a lot of recruitment agencies were passing people on with little to no vetting. You'd interview someone on camera and they'd be a different person once everything was signed. Given how hard it was to correct that they'd still walk away with a few weeks salary, even in your states with at will contracts it's super difficult to let anyone go.
I've got this, it's in the canoo app. It's for one year and not forever. Permanent residents and new citizens get access to this. I haven't been able to use this particular benefit.
It's a shortcut for experience, but you lose a lot of the tools you get with experience. If I were early in my career I'd be very hesitant relying on it as its a fragile ecosystem right now that might disappear, in the same way that you want to avoid tying your skills to a single companies product. In my workflow it slows me down because the answers I get are often average or wrong, it's never "I'd never thought of doing it that way!" levels of amazing.
What a shambles. I have a T3 now which means I now know I needed a T3, previous to that it was still unclear so I just had to wait. After reading this article I'm still unclear on what bare trusts are. They could use some helpful examples or a diagram.
Human? I'm just a lead induced hallucination. In reality you've been chewing on your gems, which coincidentally are made of lead, and talking to the wall.
I think this (well, Community) gives people hope that there are better versions in different timelines. Dash those hopes, there is only one reality, this is where they are. No rolling dice out of this one.
From one person's experience (mine): They don't read CVs that closely. I've got a couple of 1 year jobs (not contracts) and they're more interested in what I did rather than why so short. If they ask I tell them it's because I didn't like the position but gave it a go for a year. I also have a 2 year gap in employment none of them are interested in for 4 jobs now, they don't even spot the missing years and I've had to point it out in interviews because it's a story of how I deal with big tasks.
If they are that petty that they'll pass me over because of something like that then that employers policies would raise more flags than I'd want to deal with anyway.
When hiring you have hundreds of CVs pass by, I'm looking for experience, we'll sort out these other details in the interview.
Caveat: I am older now, more senior but never had issues finding work.
Im pretty senior now, you'd pass me by and the most valuable thing I'd do is to reduce that learning time.
I don't know what you do, but in my IT jobs I've seen long onboarding times are due companies not focusing on their product, eg: a finance company writing their own authentication system, or maintaining someone's vanity project who has long since departed. Get rid of that and you can bring people in off the street.
I need to show people I work with how little hardware you can use to serve this much traffic. We do around 500/second but our monthly EC2 spend is horrendous for the scale of traffic we get. But rails is what it is...
I think you have it all covered, but are there ways people can contribute with time? I'm mostly k8s focused these days though.