What are some tips for a job interview?
lattrommi @ lattrommi @lemmy.ml Posts 0Comments 185Joined 2 yr. ago

Sure you can! See?
I can't speak for Arch personally. It required more time than I had at the time to install it, as I wanted to do it the recommended way from the Archwiki but I also did not have reliable internet at the time. That was awhile ago, late 2020 I think. I started using Linux in spring of 2020.
I have been using the same installation of Manjaro KDE since
me@mycomputer ~]$ stat / | grep Birth Birth: 2024-02-05 04:54:20.000000000 -0500
which is also when I assembled this computer. The zeros at the end of 'Birth' look really improbable. They are accurate as far as I understand but I wouldn't know how to check otherwise either.
My previous system I also was using Manjaro KDE. It had a few problems, I think it was mostly because of an nvidia graphics card. That and user error. It still works to this day. I haven't reinstalled Manjaro or installed any OS on it since september of 2021. I also haven't used it much since building this new system. This has nothing to do with the operating system, I just like to share it, the computer was in two tornados one day and the CPU was partially delidded from one and it still works fine.
I will add that I am a casual user, I don't do some things that might invite trouble like torrenting. I also live alone and have very few friends and no known enemies, so overall I have a very boring threat model, that mentions cats more than most threat models do.
I also do not use the AUR and am on the stable repository. I also don't use Timeshift, I use Vorta, which uses Borg, for my backup system, which only backs up my personal files which are in my home directory on a separate partition, if something happens to the system, I will reinstall. It hasn't happened in over a year though.
For my very basic computer needs (mostly Firefox, GIMP, Blender, Zim and Kdenlive), it works fine. Cue Manjaro haters.
Do GIMP, Krita, Kdenlive or Inkscape use AI? I did not think they did, to the best of my knowledge. Maybe I'm missing something about AI assisted compression and correction, which I admit I'm not familiar with.
Does this only apply to digital media used in mainstream sources or does it mean everyone who uses editing software is using AI?
The truck might have had one of their 'lifetime' subscriptions.
Sirius sold lifetime subscriptions. Some people who purchased one were led to believe it was for the rest of their life. Sirius worded it to say it was the lifetime of the device. Their 'lifetime' service got cancelled on them after a merger with XM Radio, or they'd replace their vehicle which had a different but still a Sirius radio and could not transfer lifetime service.
There was a class action lawsuit filed. The lawsuit was settled in 2021 (subs had been sold as far back as the early 2000's) and made 'lifetime' refer to the subscriber, not the life of the radio. People with inactive subscriptions could cancel it and get $100. An active subscription could pay $35 (instead of $75) to move it to another radio, each time they wanted to move it. Except that settlement was dismissed in 2022 and it's no longer possible.
Mailing lists for Spotify and Pro Tools, plus you get signed up for a 'free' with an asterisk lifetime subscription to sirius radio that can't be cancelled.
this applies possibly to phone calls, text messages, email, comments on forums and sites like youtube and many other things.
check: does user respond? if yes, user will engage. add to will engage list.
check: how does user respond? delete or reply? if reply, add to repeat text/voice call list. if delete add to spam defender list.
will engage list: continue to send. engagement is attention. they are acknowledging and thus may be able to attract their attention in some way for advertisers.
text/voice list: same as engage list but also opens lines of communication. chance to upsell. chance to phish with support scam.
spam defender list: continue using default spam tactics. add higher level phishing techniques. consider adding to spearphishing list.
spearphishing list: has spam experience and can use computer/phone. possible tech worker. gather more information. attempt to infiltrate. cross reference username with leak db's. do they reuse their passwords?
all of the above: collect ai training data.
i don't know how true any of this is, it's simply how i imagine some of it works. i might be paranoid. how you react is part of how you get classified into a list or group.
I thought I could write something worse and came up with this. it was not really a good idea. (i modified it so no one makes my mistake by blindly copy and pasting it. hopefully.)
#! /bin/bash
if [[ -f ~./kitten.sh ]] # if the file kitten exists then killall -KILL kitten.sh || touch ./kitten # kill all kittens. if that fails, touch kitten. fi; echo "Killed kitten... )"; # announce the terrible deed. # bash kitten.sh; # runs this kitten script again. do not remove # symbol at start of this line, unless you want to have a bad time. # it will make this run repeatedly. you monster.
First watch these:
- Star Wars Holiday Special
- The Ewok Adventure
- Ewoks: The Battle for Endor
When you have finished those, you should be filled with hate and suffering. You will welcome the dark side. Now you are ready.
Start watching
- The Phantom Menace.
Stop watching before the pod race ends.
Play the videogame
- Star Wars: Pod Racer.
Crash the first pod race, killing little Anakin.
Congratulations!
You've stopped the evil Sith lords from rising to power. You've saved the Ewoks. You've saved Jarjar. Balance in the universe remains balanced. You truly are one with the force. You are ready for the light side.
Watch
- Clone Wars
The animated series that aired on Cartoon Network. Not "The Clone Wars"!!! That's different. Don't watch that one. It sucks. You want the one made by Genddy Tartakovski, known for his masterpieces, Samurai Jack and Dexter's Laboratory and his pivotal work in the series The Powerpuff Girls.
You wont need to watch anything else.
You wont want to watch anything else.
Ever.
my guess is a little bit before and for a minute or so after turning the curve.
That was me recalling a time when I was using MX Linux XFCE edition. i installed something that I didn't realize was pulling most of KDE in. i was still very new to linux and still relied on a couple windows programs, so i was dual booting as well. i was using zim because it has windows support, so i could keep notes in zim in both windows and linux, sync it to my dropbox and not lose notes switching between them.
I think my default text editor changed, either by me and forgotten or from something after KDE was pulled in. i think it went from mousepad to kwrite, and kwrite uses kate, which made zims behaviour change because it was using whatever was the default editor as its backend. i think. it's still a bit beyond me honestly. one change had to do with how tabs are processed. some tabs were done as 4 spaces instead of a tab, which messed up some formatting i did in zim. so i thought i had to figure out which text editor to set zim to use to get my tab key to work like expected again.
me saying "a dozen" is an extreme exaggeration. i do that sometimes, use hyperbole too much. the application launcher grouped libreoffice stuff with kwrite, mousepad and kate. i think it had emacs and vim in there too. i kept trying to figure out which one was was causing formatting errors. there were issues with newlines due to going from windows to linux as well i think.
it led to me getting trapped in a recursion, doing test notes in linux with different editor backends set in zim, going to windows to see the effect, going back to linux and trying another editor, repeating this while sometimes forgetting to sync to dropbox, forgetting that kate and kwrite are connected, or forgetting what i was doing and just sort of going insane. i don't have any friends that use linux. at the time, i had severely limited internet because of data caps with my isp. it was also the first year of the pandemic. so other factors were involved.
i eventually tried uninstalling everything KDE but that did not go well and i ended up without a DE at all somehow, it just booted into busybox and i started over. i'm pretty good at making the wrong choices and reacting by making worse choices. creating my own hell. i feel like i've witnessed other new users doing similar things too, so that adds to my reluctance to encourage beginner users to try things that might be too much.
Maybe things have changed and it isn't that bad anymore. Doing a search for something along the lines of "installing multiple desktop environments" and you will see there are plenty of people suggesting to not do this. Probably just as many saying it's usually fine. Note that the OP asked for a beginner friendly distro. That implies they might not be experienced enough to understand how some things work.
Saying "literally no problem about trying it out" is incorrect in my opinion and this applies to all contexts I can imagine, whether related to Linux or not. There is always a potential problem when trying something out. Nothing is idiot-proof or immune to wear and tear or perfectly free from bugs, software or literal. I personally am blessed with the uncanny ability to make the wrong choice in the majority of situations where I have a choice. That may even include the choice to make this reply.
Maybe for your use case, on the hardware you have, you haven't had any issues, with the software you use. That doesn't mean the issues don't exist. I'll mention again, do a search online. There are problems that can happen. They have happened recently. They have happened a lot. Not everyone has them.
I hate to come back to this example, since OP never stated they had it, but since you have ADHD, you may be familiar with analysis paralysis and executive dysfunction after being overwhelmed by too many things. Maybe forgetting which text editor worked best and seeing a dozen in the application launcher and start searching for the right one but by the time it is found the short term memory loss kicked in again and the original reason why it was needed has been forgotten. There could be frustration when starting to hyperfocus but an app is not working the way it did and so instead the night is spent grinding through preference menus already configured previously and eventually seeing that an update for one of the DE's rewrote a config file or is using a differsion of python or it could be more than one of these things happening and one program also has a bug that spams the journal so troubleshooting becomes much more difficult... I'm digressing and projecting too much.
Have you ever uninstalled a DE after having more than one installed? Sure, it is possible. It's easier and less time consuming to reinstall the whole OS in my experience. I'm not a professional, far from it. I know it didn't go well. I can't remember the specifics, I think I added a KDE package while using xfce and accidentally hit continue instead of cancel. It brought in all of KDE, which I didn't want so I tried to remove it and everything broke because it removed shared xfce dependencies. It might be better now. I'd prefer not to try until I'm confident I know what I'm doing and what to do when things fail afterwards.
My point originally was, and still is, that it is often not recommended to do, especially for a beginner. I mean no malice towards you and hope this doesn't seem aggressive or angry.
some nuisances are not so ignorable. having duplicate apps all over the place, each with their own settings, so if you forget which one you are using, you might find yourself spending more time in settings than desired. then there's browsers. switching DE's can cause browsers to log you out of everything, so switching often and you end up having to sign in to everything repeatedly, which for some can interrupt workflow and be frustrating. then there's the fact that some use gtk and some use qt so title bar buttons and program menu's can become confusing and ununified. can these things be ignored? sure, some people can. some cannot, such as people with ADHD for example, who can easily be sidetracked when the "file > open" menu is in a hamburger menu in one app and a bar on another.
I did say that I read about, but did not try, installing two and setting different users for them. i believe the idea is that they are both installed but don't generate config files until you log in with a user. so keeping two users, one for each DE, works but only if you never log in with the wrong user. from what i understand, i could be wrong. i believe SDDM and LightDM can both facilitate switching DE's from the login screen.
i suppose a caveat of the 'you do you' mentality, should include no interefering or infringing on the rights and actions of others, but the more people there are in any given area, the harder that becomes as far as resources and personal space are concerned.
i do feel that realizing when you are being an asshole or not doing enough is a step in the right direction. it may lead to you being motivated to attempt change for something better. maybe what might seem like not enough, is seen by someone else and inspires them to change just a tiny bit for the better.
there's that saying 'an eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind' (except that last one eyed person but all the blind people finding their way with sticks are sure to poke that out eventually) but the opposite of that is something like 'one good deed deserves another'.
maybe if enough people strive to do just a little bit more to effect positive change in the world, no matter how insignificant, others might see it and might decide to do the same. i like to hope it grows and turns into a movement, where everyone lifts people up before putting anyone down, until we all have the same respect and responsibility for everything else. or something like that. i can dream!
I've frequently said that i am incapable of thinking inside the box. it's a reference to a common interview question about whether or not a candidate can think outside the box. i believe most people start off like this, outside the box looking in. by the time they reach adulthood (or earlier) and begin looking for work, oftentimes they have become boxed in, now looking out from the inside of their structured life and the system which creates the walls. the walls don't really exist, they are metaphors for what society deems to be within the realm of what is normal and what is not. i have a developmental disorder effecting my short term memory and learn through repetition until something becomes a muscle memory moreso than through study and training like one would find in schools or when starting a new job.
i think a lot of people are more like me without realizing it, which creates a sort of contradiction in my argument here, as the majority decides what is and is not inside the box. it might be better to assume there is no box, that the greater good is part of the walls, that doing what feels right is more important than doing what the world claims is right. more simply, you do you. you can go with the flow until landing in a majestic ocean or you can throw a rock into the river from the bank and laugh at the watery explosion. in the long run, the river will be unaffected, it will find ways to continue flowing until the stream has dried up. it is what it is. if you want meaningful change, get a bunch of friends and divert the river with lots of rocks. alternatively find those whose thoughts align and build momentum into a tsunami. maybe just float on, hoping things will continue going the right way, maybe the path is set regardless. your choices in life might mean nothing. they might mean everything. you don't even have to make a choice, just you do you, as best as you can or want to.
to answer your question slightly more specifically, i'm probably a problem for current society. i use electricity, although i try to limit it. i create garbage, but try to minimize it. i don't work but not for lack of trying, i simply lack the qualifications and abilities to do anything useful for a paycheck in my area. so i spend my time doing things on my computer of little consequence and alternate that with walking around my neighborhood, picking up trash. i also bite the hand that feeds me, by protesting the actions of my government while at the same time being reliant on the programs and benefits it provides. i hope i can help enact the changes needed for society as i see it, to become more like a society i'd like to be in, by going downtown and holding a sign stating that the president should be hung for treason and his main lackey should be deported, hoping that enough people see it and agree with the statement, to the extent and reach that takes the box i'm outside of and inverts it, so that i can be inside the box for once. much like a cat in a box, there is no change or purpose when i'm inside or outside, other than perhaps minor comfort, the illusion of safety and (because it's a cat) a sense of superiority. is that helpful? probably not. i'm doing me. you do you. if you happen to be a straight woman between the ages of 32 and 52 and live in the US near the Miami Valley, maybe you could also do me. (that last line ruins this whole comment and i should omit it)
I believe there is value in it. By not knowing about some negative role model like these youtube personalities, when my nephews are talking about them I can be more believably disinterested if I don't know who they are. When they attempt to explain the person my continued disinterest helps them realize the person they follow isn't that great, since they rarely do great things and my nephews might realize that as they search for reasons why they watch them. If I use my time to learn about more positive role models and activities instead, it's easier to shift their opinions to something better. I can't just say "X person sucks, don't watch them" since that usually only further entrenches them in watching the drivel.
an example is when I pulled out my raspberry pi, plugged it into their tv and started playing retrogames, ignoring them while they were talking about some LTT video because i thought it was boring. it wasn't long before they dropped their conversation and were focused on what i was doing, as I played various games on it. now they seem more interested in learning how to do that, instead of mindlessly watching some idiot.
i know that is a weak argument. i know i can also come up with examples of times my ignorance has been detrimental. like regarding idiotic political figures whom i should have learned more about, to help inform people of why they are bad, instead of sticking my head in the sand until things got a lot worse.
so i see and understand your point that it's better to not be ignorant about internet celebrities and awful people. i still feel it is better to spend time focusing on better things, hoping that my chosen interests can outweigh my choice to ignore idiots. in the long run it all comes down to opinions i suppose.
Yeah this is important to know as installing two DE's can and will cause a lot of problems.
I've read, but have not tried, that installing each DE under it's own user can prevent the majority of these problems. This also prevents using apps from different DE's simultaneously, you have to switch users to do so. Session saving makes it faster than restarting constantly but it can still interrupt workflow. Again, I have not tried this myself but have considered trying it.
I'm proud of the fact I don't know who that is and even more proud that I don't care if anyone thinks that is not impressive. I hate that I learned who poodiepie is and have yet to meet any fans that weren't mentally challenged. It is a waste of space in my brain and I would happily live under a rock if it meant I didn't have to know about the existance of vapid, self-centered, so-called "youtube celebrities". They add nothing to this world of any value and wouldn't be missed.
Who is "we"? You got a mouse in your pocket or something? I absolutely would make that sacrifice. I hate smartphones. I didn't own one until 2020 and only ended up with it because some scumbag salesman tricked my aging mom into buying it and adding a new number on her account under contract. So she gave it to me. I wish smartphones would go away. They are as "smart" as AI is "intelligent". I've gone without a car most of my life, i've never had netflix/instagram/amazon/twitter/etc accounts, I didn't have internet for the first 15 years as an adult and I am ready to give these things I have now that I don't want, which are somehow mandatory to participate in life these days. The prospect of getting rid of it all and trying my hand at hermit life or as a hobo grow stronger every day.
It reverses time for just the toast, so that it becomes regular bread again. unfortunately, a side effect is that it is also sent backwards through time at an exponentially larger rate, so you end up with a long wait for the dinosaur to deliver it to you. dinosaurs are notoriously bad at being on time. you'd be better off untoasting it by dipping it in water and microwaving it for a minute or so to dry.
Find out, if you can, whether the company has a dress code or uniform. Try to wear clothes similar to their dress code. The interviewer will be able to picture you working as an empoloyee more easily.
If they ask if you have any questions, ALWAYS ask a question, even if it's a simple one or a little dumb (not too dumb though!). It shows you are actually interested in the position and not just looking for a paycheck. A risky but often good one to ask is "Why are you hiring for this position?" If they need clarification, ask if it is a new role in the company or if someone left, in case of the latter, ask if they gave a reason why they left.
Know your value. Set a minimum wage that you will accept. Don't take an offer for shitty pay. If they offer a starting wage lower than your minimum, add 33-50% to their offer and guage how they react. If 33-50% doesn't bring the amount up to or higher than your set minimum, thank them for their time and leave.
Go to the company website and look for their "about us" page. Read everything on the page and try to pick out their key words. Use those words somehow in your interview to describe yourself or your work ethic.
Sleep with the owner. This is a joke to make sure you are paying attention.
Practice an "elevator interview". That's where you imagine you just got on an elevator with the person in charge of hiring and you have 30 seconds or less to make a good impression. Take all things into account as if you were really in an elevator. That means try not to fart and wear deodorant. Talk fast but not too fast. End it in a way where they do not even have a chance to respond, you get off the elevator and leave, wishing them a nice day.
Find out if you know anyone already working there or even have a friend of a friend that does. An in-house recommendation always will increase your chances, provided you are on good terms with that person or their mutual friend.