|
Pweller posted:Those details don't mean you're automatically excluded, it very likely depends heavily on which countries. USSR/Russia
|
# ? Oct 15, 2012 23:02 |
|
|
# ? Apr 20, 2024 07:20 |
|
Sab669 posted:Just curious, what determines if one is able to get security clearancces? Obviously it varies from level to level, but generally speaking. Ensign Expendable posted:I'm a dual citizen with two foreign passports, plus the country I was born in no longer exists. In the first phase of information gathering they will ask you questions about if you have ever been a citizen of another country and if you have ever held dual passports. This is where you shouldn't lie and everybody will be hunky dory with the fact that you're a comrade by birthright. From what I know of people from Canada with dual citizenship that received clearance, the only thing they had to do was renounce their dual citizenship and formally surrender their foreign passport. I imagine that you would have to do the same.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 00:50 |
|
Ensign Expendable posted:USSR/Russia For what it's worth, I'm a naturalized citizen and had no issues (no dual citizenship or foreign passports though).
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 00:51 |
|
Currently doing a non-development internship for $10/hr at a place 60-80 minutes from my home at 20 hrs/wk. I estimate that I spend an extra $40/wk due to the extra driving. I do QA work here, though it's with a scrum team that seems to have its act together. In January I'll have a different class schedule and only be able to work here 16 hours per week. My friend just told me that he's looking for a replacement for the position he has, since they only give him 5-20 hrs/wk, though it's usually much closer to 5. They pay $25/hr (though I'm like 99% sure it's contract work) and it's actually development work rather than QA. It's a work-from-home job, so no implication of teamwork or social skills for my resume. Normally, I would just take it and work both jobs, but I naively signed a work-for-hire/assignment contract with my current employer. Anyway, is there any tactful way I can ask my boss about the possibility of getting permission, from whomever is has that authority, to pursue work on the side here? If not, then would it look bad on my resume to quit an internship after three months to go for another part-time job? Would it look better on my resume just because I could sell it as "real" work (meaning not an internship) and because it would be actual development work? I'm thinking, next semester I'll suddenly be getting $160/wk here and be spending ~$30/wk, so next semester I'll be getting $130/wk before taxes for 16 hours of work, plus I share a vehicle with someone else, so even if I only work 8 hours in a day, my entire day is consumed because I wake up around 6am to get ready and get home around 8-9pm. If I can get this other job, then next semester I'd be getting $125/wk before taxes, without the crazy driving, and I could direct the extra time toward working on my own projects so that I can get a decent job at some point. Most importantly, it would be another bullet on my resume, which only says that I did some research assistant work for a professor for six months and this internship for three months.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 00:52 |
|
Chasiubao posted:You probably missed the boat for the next round of internships. Whoever they're interviewing right now is probably scheduled to start in January or something. But if they're anything like where I work, they hire interns to start in batches, and you missed this one, but they're inviting you to interview for the next one. Do you think it's kosher to inquire if they have any openings left for January?
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 00:54 |
|
Sab669 posted:Just curious, what determines if one is able to get security clearancces? Obviously it varies from level to level, but generally speaking. These days it's more likely to be denied clearance due to really bad credit (the old "I'm in debt and vulnerable to doing stupid poo poo to get out of debt" thing) than anything else, so it may be worth getting your yearly free credit report and cleaning up anything that you think is wrong or implies that you're in worse debt than you are (e.g. consolidated your student loans but your old unconsolidated loans still show as "open")
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 01:11 |
Safe and Secure! posted:Currently doing a non-development internship for $10/hr at a place 60-80 minutes from my home at 20 hrs/wk. I estimate that I spend an extra $40/wk due to the extra driving. I do QA work here, though it's with a scrum team that seems to have its act together. In January I'll have a different class schedule and only be able to work here 16 hours per week. $10 / hr is stupid low. That's like poverty wages for a programmer. I would honestly just drop the other job and pursue more lucrative opportunities, including building your own software. Don't worry about the length of the internship, just make sure you can get a letter of recommendation from one of your supervisors.
|
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 02:28 |
|
Ensign Expendable posted:I'm a dual citizen with two foreign passports, plus the country I was born in no longer exists. If you started the clearance process and were denied specifically for that reason you can ameliorate it by renouncing your foreign citizenship and giving up your passport. I know someone who did this with their Swiss citizenship, though it's probably a different story for Russia...
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 03:26 |
|
Giving up a Russian citizenship is a colossal pain in the rear end, so sadly that's not an option.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 03:28 |
|
Ensign Expendable posted:Giving up a Russian citizenship is a colossal pain in the rear end, so sadly that's not an option. While it might be an issue if you ever go back to Russia, I imagine the process of saying "Hey USA all the way, yankee doodle John Elway" and surrendering your Russian passport should be good enough for the US.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 05:24 |
|
Perhaps. I'll look into it the next time a defense contractor is interested in me, meanwhile I have a pretty decent job already.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 05:32 |
|
All this talk of security clearance reminds me of how my grandfather (a career Army officer) had issues when he needed to get his. They don't like it when you don't know what your own first name is... Also, resume questions! (Would this be better served in the general resume thread in BFC? ) At the top of my coding resume, I list my competencies, namely the programming languages and libraries I know. Since I don't have a degree and have no work experience should I refrain from using the "kitchen sink" method and just list the ones I'd be comfortable with writing code in right now? Currently, I have C++, C#, Java (all caps is no longer in vogue, yes?), and MIPS, which is a partial kitchen sink as I'm missing C (though that could be assumed by C++) and R (which I learned a little while trying to tutor/teach someone it). If I've done most of my programming in C++ using Visual C++ (seriously bought a retail copy with lunch money in HS), is that enough to slap on .NET as a known library? For reference, I only have OpenGL listed in my libraries section, but that's a stretch as we used glut for the one class I took on graphics. Also, when skimming through job postings I've always assumed that "Associate" and "Junior" are typically entry-level positions, are there any other keywords I should be on the lookout for? Zhentar posted:Project Euler is pretty good for practicing. Wanted to thank you for this but it took a while for me to start doing them. I've been using it to learn C#, for the most part, and they've been quite fun. The problems are making me think a little and I'm finding myself writing some fun little code. Hell, I'm even commenting it for all of the nobody that will ever see it.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 05:57 |
|
BirdOfPlay posted:If I've done most of my programming in C++ using Visual C++ (seriously bought a retail copy with lunch money in HS), is that enough to slap on .NET as a known library? Unless you were coding in C++/CLI (I sincerely doubt this if you're doing hobby coding), then .NET has nothing to do with C++. I wouldn't put a language on my resume unless I was comfortable answering questions about it in an interview. If I couldn't sit down without checking reference material for syntax, I'd still put it on my resume if I knew enough to know what to look for, if that makes any sense.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 08:13 |
|
BirdOfPlay posted:If I've done most of my programming in C++ using Visual C++ (seriously bought a retail copy with lunch money in HS), is that enough to slap on .NET as a known library? For reference, I only have OpenGL listed in my libraries section, but that's a stretch as we used glut for the one class I took on graphics. Have you used .NET?
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 08:21 |
|
shrughes posted:Have you used .NET? w00tz0r posted:Unless you were coding in C++/CLI (I sincerely doubt this if you're doing hobby coding), then .NET has nothing to do with C++. Ehh... Yeah, I see what y'all are saying. I probably got confused cause the .NET thread seems to deal a lot with C# and I used VC++.NET 2003 for C++. quote:I wouldn't put a language on my resume unless I was comfortable answering questions about it in an interview. If I couldn't sit down without checking reference material for syntax, I'd still put it on my resume if I knew enough to know what to look for, if that makes any sense. Completely does. I'm just going to nix the Libraries cause I doubt it'll make me look any better (especially if I whiff on an OpenGL question). Thanks, guys.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 10:07 |
|
BirdOfPlay posted:All this talk of security clearance reminds me of how my grandfather (a career Army officer) had issues when he needed to get his. They don't like it when you don't know what your own first name is... How did that happen?
|
# ? Oct 16, 2012 18:06 |
|
qntm posted:How did that happen? Well, he always thought his given name, Billie, was just a nickname for William, but it wasn't until he enlisted for the Army band (I think) that he found out his legal first name was Billie. Of course, it wasn't much of a hubbub at the time; he didn't plan on going career. Fast forward to him being general staff and posted at the Pentagon, and he gets screened pretty hard because of that little gaffe. He ended up getting it (not sure what level), but his file ended up being filled with "AKA William" all over the place.
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 04:33 |
|
So I got an unsolicited email from a guy claiming to be a Google recruiter. My first reaction was that it was fake/phishing, but he has a valid linkedin profile and none of the links in his email point to anywhere unexpected. I thought that it was fake because he said he got my information from github, and thought I might be a good fit based on that info. While I do have a github account and my name and such is available, I'm not an active contributor to any projects of note. The only commits I have are just small personal scripts and a tiny python apps that I work on with a friend. Has this happened to anyone else? edited for grammar
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 16:16 |
|
astr0man posted:So I got an unsolicited email from a guy claiming to be a Google recruiter. My first reaction was that it was fake/phishing, but he has a valid linkedin profile and none of the links in his email point to anywhere unexpected. I can confirm Google is currently recruiting by sending unsolicited emails from recruiters. They are typically not technical people, so they probably aren't actually evaluating your work as much as seeing "candidate has project in language X".
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 16:20 |
|
Gah, had an interview for a company I really want to work for last Monday. They never called back / responded to my emails a few days later so I thought I didn't get it (after the interview I felt I did very poorly). Just got a call back now, and the rep was even nice enough to share the guy's feedback on me: Lack the real world-skills (duh, I'm a fresh grad ) but should be able to catch on very quickly they think Now I'm just sitting at my desk at work all excited to maybe work somewhere that will pay me appropriately, eagerly awaiting the next phone call.
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 17:26 |
|
astr0man posted:So I got an unsolicited email from a guy claiming to be a Google recruiter. My first reaction was that it was fake/phishing, but he has a valid linkedin profile and none of the links in his email point to anywhere unexpected. Hey, I work at Google, and I know for a fact recruiters definitely do find people by looking on github so this is probably real enough.
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 18:24 |
|
seiken posted:Hey, I work at Google, and I know for a fact recruiters definitely do find people by looking on github so this is probably real enough. They also appear to scrape LinkedIn and decide that guys who write firmware for a living would be a "good fit" for a "Site Reliability Engineer" position aka sysadmin
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 19:00 |
seiken posted:Hey, I work at Google, and I know for a fact recruiters definitely do find people by looking on github so this is probably real enough. I was recruited for Facebook the other week from Github.
|
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 19:07 |
|
Otto Skorzeny posted:They also appear to scrape LinkedIn and decide that guys who write firmware for a living would be a "good fit" for a "Site Reliability Engineer" position aka sysadmin Their purpose is to make sure you're not a raving lunatic and to get your resume to see if they can get you a phone screen. It is interesting that even Google doesn't want to spend the resources to have a more technical point of first contact.
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 19:07 |
|
seiken posted:Hey, I work at Google, and I know for a fact recruiters definitely do find people by looking on github so this is probably real enough.
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 19:34 |
|
It's not Google, but that's actually how I got one of my most recent job interviews. Accenture is a huge company and they got in touch with me because of my profile on Dice / LinkedIn (not sure exactly which one they found me on, I got a phone call)
|
# ? Oct 17, 2012 19:43 |
|
Otto Skorzeny posted:They also appear to scrape LinkedIn and decide that guys who write firmware for a living would be a "good fit" for a "Site Reliability Engineer" position aka sysadmin I'm not sure if you're unhappy because you think SRE doesn't involve any coding or because you think sysadmin is beneath you or what, but just so you know SRE at google is pretty much the Best of the Best, there's lots of real software engineering involved (if you want to do that) and at google scale it's kind of incredibly sick. I don't know if it's really comparable to regular sysadmin stuff at all. If you just really love embedded systems though then fair enough. vvv yeah, hyperbole, mostly I just mean in general it's not any lesser of a position than dev for instance in terms of doing cool stuff. (I've a little experience with both roles) seiken fucked around with this message at 00:27 on Oct 18, 2012 |
# ? Oct 17, 2012 20:09 |
|
eh
Ninja Rope fucked around with this message at 05:24 on Oct 18, 2012 |
# ? Oct 17, 2012 22:17 |
|
astr0man posted:So I got an unsolicited email from a guy claiming to be a Google recruiter. My first reaction was that it was fake/phishing, but he has a valid linkedin profile and none of the links in his email point to anywhere unexpected.
|
# ? Oct 18, 2012 01:13 |
|
seiken posted:I'm not sure if you're unhappy because you think SRE doesn't involve any coding or because you think sysadmin is beneath you or what, Don't be so quick to get your knickers in a twist. I think Otto Skorzeny is just pointing out that there really aren't many skill overlaps between writing firmware and managing some of the largest data centers in the world.
|
# ? Oct 18, 2012 04:59 |
|
More or less yeah. I have no idea why the recruiter thought I would be qualified or interested. Maybe because my degree has the phrase "systems engineering" at the tail end? Meh, doesn't matter. Aside: while I love embedded stuff and enjoy my job, firmware is by no means a high horse and in fact about as unsexy as you can get most of the time. You spend easily ten times as much time restraining yourself from doing something clever or interesting in favor of something much more pedestrian that you can be very confident will be reliable; seldom can you revel in your CLOSE TO THE METAL adrenaline rush. You use C and asm partly for performance, yes, but since you have to turn off a crapton of optimizations if you want things to work (not necessarily your own code that gets broken by them as libraries stop working and/or become impossible to debug, timing loops that someone wrote 20 years and 2 versions of the product ago get obliterated and you don't want to rewrite and more importantly re-test them, etc) and you probably downclocked the cpu a crapton to increase battery life, so nothing will ever go as fast as you know it could. Close control over hardware and the layout of data in memory is much more important. Chip vendors are flaky as can be and tools are generally low-volume products full of bugs. There's an adage somewhere that 90% of bugs are in your code, 9% are in libraries and 1% are in the [operating] system. That holds pretty well for desktop, server and probably mobile development, but oh my goodness are some embedded products full of bugs. It's super unfun to write your own freaking floating point to string routine because your chip vendor's version of sprintf uses ten times too much stact and their version of the obsolete gcvt() family of functions give demonstrably wrong output. Oh and their entire analog spec is a lie, every word of it, including 'and' and 'the'. Eventually apps engineers from the worst offenders will stop picking up the phone when they see your company's area code on the caller ID. And of course, you will always waste a bunch of time trying to bludgeon a solid set of objective requirements from marketing for whatever product you're working on.
|
# ? Oct 18, 2012 06:09 |
|
oRenj9 posted:Don't be so quick to get your knickers in a twist. I think Otto Skorzeny is just pointing out that there really aren't many skill overlaps between writing firmware and managing some of the largest data centers in the world. Apologies, I didn't mean to be confrontational or anything, just saying it's interesting stuff and you don't necessarily need managing huge datacenter skill experience. I came into SRE with only regular programming experience and I think it's neat! But yeah, I feel daft now cause it's obvious you just like embedded stuff sorry. seiken fucked around with this message at 11:21 on Oct 18, 2012 |
# ? Oct 18, 2012 11:12 |
|
Heya thread. I'm completing an MA in English in Vancouver. I did 2 years of CS in undergrad before getting fed up with instruction practices and jumping ship to the humanities, where I learned quite a bit and fixed some pervasive health issues. Did HTML/CSS/some PHP as a freelance graphic designer, before getting fed up with non-paying clients and doing this MA. Need to pay the rent, predictably, and I'm looking ahead at a graduation date and wondering if I can put a portfolio together and shake the rust off with some projects. How feasible is it to train up to work-ready knowledge and experience, period, never mind in the short timeframe I have?
|
# ? Oct 20, 2012 08:20 |
|
If you spent more time trying and less time asking if it was possible, yep, I'm pretty sure you can improve, even in a short time. As for work-ready, that depends on the jobs you're after.
|
# ? Oct 20, 2012 18:13 |
|
This is already the case, so cool.
|
# ? Oct 20, 2012 22:26 |
|
Orikaeshigitae posted:Need to pay the rent, predictably, and I'm looking ahead at a graduation date and wondering if I can put a portfolio together and shake the rust off with some projects. How feasible is it to train up to work-ready knowledge and experience, period, never mind in the short timeframe I have? Also, difficult to say without knowing how good you are/were at it. Will be way different if you were a coding genius wizard or if you were struggling in the CS classes or what. vvv IF doesn't sound completely trivial, presumably you have to do some decent parsing of natural language for that to be any good? seiken fucked around with this message at 02:50 on Oct 21, 2012 |
# ? Oct 20, 2012 23:14 |
|
I was decent at it. I was struggling with the calc and linear algebra at the time, but that had more to do with working midnights and going to school during the week than with my ability. I've kept up coding with interactive fiction and light web stuff, but nothing that anyone here would take seriously. I'm an autodidact and I have no aversion to work, though.
|
# ? Oct 20, 2012 23:22 |
|
A MIRACLE posted:Don't worry about the length of the internship, just make sure you can get a letter of recommendation from one of your supervisors. Do letters of recommendation actually mean anything to employers? I've never heard of them being used anywhere outside of school. What would I even do with one?
|
# ? Oct 21, 2012 03:04 |
|
Safe and Secure! posted:Do letters of recommendation actually mean anything to employers? I've never heard of them being used anywhere outside of school. What would I even do with one?
|
# ? Oct 21, 2012 03:24 |
|
|
# ? Apr 20, 2024 07:20 |
|
seiken posted:Also, difficult to say without knowing how good you are/were at it. Will be way different if you were a coding genius wizard or if you were struggling in the CS classes or what. Much of it is taken care of by the parser in inform 6, which I was learning before Inform 7 came out. Inform 7 has a natural-language interpreter, so really you're doing a lot of defining classes and managing inheritance and polymorphism, only with sentences instead of expressions.
|
# ? Oct 21, 2012 05:31 |