Skip Navigation
Programmers of Lemmy, what are your interviewing horror stories?
  • I interviewed for a shop in Ottawa.

    I was working at the time, but it was declining situation so I was Motivated.

    So I show up a the appointed time, and I meet a guy who can best be described as 'a little grizzled' and 'a little stressed'. We go over my resume, first off the bat.

    "These are the things we need from you," he said, tapping items on a list. "And these are places you suck," he said, tapping the same list.

    I basically checked out at that point; there was no way I was suitable for this post. I could learn it, but it was a lot. And while I had a lot of other skills that showed up on the job desc and my CV, missing so many important pieces was insurmountable. It wasn't a super-fun experience no matter how interesting he was - he was a great lead hand - and I left without much fanfare. Great rambling talk about all kinds of things, but it's the worst I've ever flamed out in an interview; and the fastest.

    Imagine my surprise when he 'strong-hire'd me. I actually said to the recruiter, "Yeah, you've got it wrong. No no, and it's totally okay, but you're off by one or something. You mean to call the name above mine or the name below mine, and that guy is probably gonna love this job. But you don't mean to call me. No stress, all good, but yeah, I'm not the guy you wanted to call."

    It was a great job and that guy was my lead. Brutal honestly is fabulous if you can take it.

  • CVE-2024-42472 - 10.0 - Flatpack < 1.14.10 , >= 1.15.0, < 1.15.10 sandbox escape

    !

    I haven't seen it yet, and this one is near and dear to my heart.

    Update your stuff -- this one's been affecting Enterprise Linux for maybe 12 years, versions the distros have long since grown bored of supporting, so essentially every EL install out there. So great.

    1
    Public health agency launches probe into Air Canada vomit incident | Globalnews.ca
  • tight-packed schedules

    Extra hardware.

    Not something sitting there hot and ready to go, but there to take the place of the flight. Maintain a one-unit queue of planes ready to board and launch so that each and every plane sits for 2 hours and is actually prepped.

    Or, when that inevitable daily breakage happens and a plane needs to be taken off the line for the day, it allows time to bring in another spare to keep that queue full (of 1) when the rotation loses that active plane.

  • Air Canada customers kicked off plane for refusing vomit-covered seat
  • With no extra airplanes, they probably don't have time.

    Again, the problem comes down to no extra equipment; even when it would give them the lag time to properly clean between departures at no added hw maintenance or aircrew costs.

  • Air Canada customers kicked off plane for refusing vomit-covered seat
  • Agreed. We've had just so many experiences of negligence and apathy from Air Canada that we've given up on them and also consider them an airline of last resort. We'll move dates and locations to open up other options before considering them, as well, and even reconsider just not going.

    Great news for Air Canada is that Westjet got bought and declined sharply since then, so they're only much better than Air Canada instead of being in a different category completely as before.

  • Dear Red Hat: Are you dumb?
  • . I would not be surprised if this was just a Red Hat thing.

    It's a tough one. We blame RedHat for a lot of its half-baked internal fridge art - systemd, network manager; and even, some days, yum in an apt-4-rpm world.

    But this new one is QUITE the departure. It's not 'red hat' stupid but a little further on the spectrum.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BI
    bishopolis @lemmy.ca
    Posts 1
    Comments 18