Step 1: Use AI to get you the job Step 2: Use AI to do the job you lied about
@matt_milack2 ай бұрын
Step 3: Get fired in 2 months
@pandoraeeris78602 ай бұрын
Step 3: ? Step 4: profit?
@LathamFell2 ай бұрын
so real lmao
@gavinjones2 ай бұрын
You are the new Justin Y
@ImRandomDude2 ай бұрын
wrong. Step 1: Use AI to get you the job Step 2: outsource your work to someone competent but in cheaper country Step 3: keep the extra money Step 4: repeat at different company Step 5: gather infinite money until it falls apart real story
@trueinviso12 ай бұрын
I think there's probably a lot of people that couldn't pass the tech interview without cheating but could still do the job just fine.
@noponarchsage73602 ай бұрын
There definitely are, but I do know some people who cheated to get into faang and got pipped pretty quickly. None of the cheaters who didn't get pipped ever ended up getting promoted as well so they still have new grad TC.
@mghaderyan2 ай бұрын
@@noponarchsage7360 yeah but there are many companies other than faang
@ELCHDA2 ай бұрын
This is 100% true for Leetcode interviews.
@lookinforanick2 ай бұрын
Yes/no. Some companies ask stuff that has ZERO to do with day to day operations (and that isn't "transferable" either) and in that case I agree. The places I worked I always ended up getting questions that were quite role and business specific, semplifications of what would be BaU and if you fail at those you would clearly be a drag.
@CoolbreezeFromSteam2 ай бұрын
Trying to get a software job has continued to be a worsening hell for the last 5 years lol. Tons of people I know who have well formatted resumes with good stuff in them can't even get interviews, and a lot of times when each position has 500+ applicants, your chance of even getting an interview is
@dustypants93262 ай бұрын
Corporations: Don't cheat with AI to get a job. Also corporations: Let's replace the workforce with AI.
@THEROOT11112 ай бұрын
Clown world gonna clown.
@tjmarx2 ай бұрын
The more you cheat with GPT and it passes, the more the employer wonders why they're interviewing for a position that GPT could just do for less money instead.
@edumazieri2 ай бұрын
ironic but not weird at all, I mean, they don't care who or what does the job, but they do care about how much they pay for it.
@edumazieri2 ай бұрын
@@tjmarx ya but someone has to go prompt the damn thing and push the code... it's not like the CEO is gonna do that on a big company. They might actually need less developers, though. There's a million problems with what I'm gonna say next, but in theory it doesn't have to be a bad thing, just means high skilled people will be even more valuable as they can be even more productive, while low skilled will be in lower demand as the high skilled ones won't need as many "extra hands" to help out. And this sort of pushes people to upskill, raises the bar a bit, and that ain't so bad. It kinda happened like that with every tech advancement. Of course, it does take a while for workforce to adapt, and it does benefit employers a lot at the expense of employees, as they have to be more productive for basically the same pay level, and are now competing for much fewer jobs. That part is absolutely awful and a very good reason for us to get off our asses and start doing smth about it. (to be clear, the answer is not "forbidding tech", wish I didn't have to clarify it... that clearly doesn't work and isn't in the best interest of progress) wow, that was way longer than it should have been :D feel free to ignore it.
@xichen28722 ай бұрын
You shouldn't copy-paste AI code at work without knowing exactly what the code does, and neither should you do that during an interview. At work that's called being clueless, during an interview that's called cheating. If you can truly understand what your AI Agent wrote for an interview question and add your modifications on top, that's okay IMO.
@andrewcraswell41172 ай бұрын
I just interviewed a bunch of candidates at a MFANG company. We used a real world problem where you need to fix a series of bugs in a small minimal reproduction environment. We started the interviews telling candidates we dont care if they use Google, ChatGPT, or other AIs. The challenge is not designed to test whether you have amazing recall, but how you reason through a problem in the codebase. I don't think an AI would have helped much to solve the problem. But it would have been great to get a refresher for how to implement a specific design pattern or algorithm. And that's totally fine to use AI for, because again, whats important is the candidate recognized the right tool for the job not that they memorized how to implement it.
@SYL3RR2 ай бұрын
Do you mind giving more details?
@thedownwardmachine2 ай бұрын
There’s so much stuff to know these days, so infrequently used and constantly changing, that it’s more important to quickly learn what you need to know and develop an intuitive sense for problem solving than to know tons of stuff.
@bazookapenguinz33762 ай бұрын
Lol are you still hiring. This sounds great 😂
@davidlazerz85642 ай бұрын
EXACTLY! It's like how we dont focus so much on kids memorizing thousands of bits of trivia in grade school anymore and focus more on teaching them how to work through problems and search for solutions.
@DavidDLee2 ай бұрын
I guess the main problems with this are: 1. You need to explain too much, or that the description could be too long and yet people will have legitimate questions 2. The problem needs to be not too easy and not too hard 3. It can be solved during the interview 4. Would it be a good predictor of a good addition to the team? Would it reject perfectly good candidates? The current system is pretty terrible, but it is good at 1, 3 and you can adjust for 2. I am pretty sure the current system does not work well for 4.
@isk8atparks2 ай бұрын
Ive been working for 4 years now out of college. No way i could pass the invert a binary tree question anymore.
@jamess.24912 ай бұрын
Unless you're applying for a junior or internship position I don't know who would ask those kind of interview questions.
@abhilashpatel68522 ай бұрын
@@jamess.2491i know many who would ask that in both India and USA. Can't say about yours.
@TheBlawdfire2 ай бұрын
@@jamess.2491 everyone outside early-stage startups are still asking those questions up to Lead-level roles
@balasuar2 ай бұрын
That's why you prep for interviews. I wouldn't expect you to pass a mid-term without studying either.
@BorisPushkin-rq2hm2 ай бұрын
@@balasuarYou shouldnt test a cars performance on the moon if youre never gonna send it to the moon... (but if you make internal combustion work on the moon thatd be pretty dope)
@_deathcry2 ай бұрын
Dead internet theory is progressing, soon when face call AI will improve, we end up with bots interviewing other bots
@matt_milack2 ай бұрын
Yeah, we are just about 4 major break-thoughts away from it.
@eugenes97512 ай бұрын
Already been happening for a while now. It's become a real problem in the last 3 months or so where every top submission is Ai generated and now recruiters are purposely ignoring the resumes and cover letters that look professional.
@plaintext72882 ай бұрын
just use the ai detector gpt
@mastermaster1532 ай бұрын
then Dead world xd
@somethingclever42972 ай бұрын
And once everyone is a bot. No one will be.
@mascot49502 ай бұрын
These job interviews seem designed to employ people who interview well, as opposed to people who'd do the job well. This might be some of the explanation for the software quality these companies seem to output these days. As someone who last interviewed in 1998, I greatly fear the day I'll have to go through a modern day interview process.
@SkamanSamTyler2 ай бұрын
I straight-up tell interviewers I don't knoe when that happens. My strenght is that I don't waste time memorizing things when I can just look them up. I know THAT something can be done (read: standards, design patterns, etc.), the HOW is just a few clicks away. Most interviews I have had involved algorithms I would never use. I just don't understand the idea behind them and I don;t want to work for a compay that does that. It feels like a kind of classism.
@Anonymous-dk5qu2 ай бұрын
@@SkamanSamTyler That's because it is classism. You can't tell me it's not a class issue when there's people who have the time and funding to spend months grinding leetcode without worrying about working to put food on the table, while all the other plebs have to work to survive, and not have the same time advantage to study a useless skill.
@armandoalvarado58402 ай бұрын
I did tons of interviews this year. The process is broken. Not because it has exploitable flaws like described in this video, but because alongside that, there's this vibe of infallibility where you can't doubt the interviewer's skill without disqualifying yourself in the eyes of the industry. If YOU couldn't solve this obscure problem that has no real world relevance to the job, then it's YOUR fault aka skill issue. Company is fine, company can do no wrong, hiring manager definitely has a well-thought-out methodology of screening candidates and isn't just winging it due to the overwhelming candidate pool. No way man, impossible, you really think company could get this far if they didn't know what they were doing? It must be you. Have you tried grinding more leetcode??
@mattb46252 ай бұрын
This has been shown to be the case. UNC did a series of studies to test the technical interview process and found it to be heavily biased and not even remotely capable of finding the best undergrad students when compared to recommendations from faculty. Basically, the old school model of 'Prof X recommands student Y' beats the entire process of modern tech interviews.
@mattb46252 ай бұрын
@@armandoalvarado5840 I've got 12 years of experience as a data scientist and have failed multiple interviews this year because they wanted me to pass leetcode questions totally unrelated to data science. Yeah, not great at using hashmaps, but hasmaps don't ask a damn thing about p-values, how to train a statistical model, or investigation processes. Just to name a few...
@Shazam9992 ай бұрын
My friend's brother works at a software development place, they've been burned so many times that they only do in-person hiring and they stick the guy in the room and tell him to write something. Some people have just left immediately, admitting that they lied about everything on their resume.
@notsojharedtroll232 ай бұрын
Lmao
@daleryanaldover65452 ай бұрын
This is the way, I would appreciate if interviews does this more often.
@thewiirocks2 ай бұрын
Sounds like when I tried to hire Software Architects. I don't even understand how we possibly have anyone called an Architect yet they can't code, but whatever. 90% of the interviews went like this: ME: "This is an engineering position where you WILL be coding. Are you okay with that?" THEM: "Oh yes, I completely understand." ME: THEM: "Uhhh... this sounds like a coding position. I'm an Enterprise _Architect_ ... I don't code." ME: ...
@yajirushik28712 ай бұрын
Meanwhile me, I can create full-stack apps on my own, and failing recruitment because of basic stuff which I haven't used in very long time (about a year) 😅.
@Vptkvc2 ай бұрын
We got burned so many times. We’ve caught many of them cheating. We’ve hired frauds too. It got to the point that we assume candidate is cheating until proven otherwise if we decide to interview. Industry is doomed and cheaters are ruining it for ALL of us.
@chadyways87502 ай бұрын
to be fair, technical interviews are largely pointless in a lot of companies that it's kind of funny "hey, invert this binary tree" at work: "so, we need you to query this API and move the data to a table" very good
@pain2theworld6122 ай бұрын
The interviews are harder then the job itself its funny
@vulpo2 ай бұрын
In my entire software career, I don't recall every having to invert a binary tree.
@biffstephens42352 ай бұрын
Or they want you to fix a problem they are having and have no plans on hiring you. I had so many of those kind of "situations" they want me to code for them and I immediately know it is something they want fixed. Best part is when they are asking questions. ok so why you do that. and you just know they are taking "notes".
@valentinrafael92012 ай бұрын
It all comes down to why you know to do what you do or how did you learn. Did you learn just by redoing and kind of understanding the problem in its isolated generic definition state? If yes, then you don't really know how to apply it and when. It's like when a math teacher can just straight up give formulas to kids in school, to have them for the test, and then they don't know which formula to use for which problem in the test. It's all about how you arrived at knowing how to do the thing.
@valentinrafael92012 ай бұрын
@@vulpo You will never have to deal with straight up "invert a binary tree" but you will deal with moving things around, swapping places, keeping order. We do that every single day in our daily lives, we just don't think of it as "inverting a binary tree".
@devvilboyy6767672 ай бұрын
I just love it when a small company, with a user base of no more than 1k, asks for an inverted binary tree when in reality you'll probably be in maintenance for the great majority of the time and rarely ever push out a groundbreaking feature.
@wuzimu23232 ай бұрын
I love computers and IT, but I hate modern technology industry...
@Icedanon2 ай бұрын
Yup
@sobieckil072 ай бұрын
It's what becomes of every industry that becomes a stock market's investor's darling. If you want to have a normal life and healthy mental state, stay away from the trendy new thing.
@muhdiversity74092 ай бұрын
I despise it. Infested with people that don't practice but are making the rules and making it worse.
@wuzimu23232 ай бұрын
@@muhdiversity7409 are you trying to tell that we need more managers and even less work done?
@muhdiversity74092 ай бұрын
@@wuzimu2323 Definitely more managers and agile coaches. Got to make those burn down charts have the correct shape.
@mosesgitau3802 ай бұрын
Soon we'll be interviewed by AI, while using AI to cheat and AI using anti-AI software to determine if you used AI to cheat in the interview.
@owenharrison6682 ай бұрын
they already use AI to chuck out the majority of applications. Same with having AI to mark Hireview interviews.
@TheSuperBoyProject2 ай бұрын
At my last company they already used an AI to evaluate every applicant's CV with the requirements of the job advert. The HR lady never looked at any applicant below 80%, even when the AI couldn't parse the information from the CV
@theunknown213292 ай бұрын
@@TheSuperBoyProjectthat feels so wrong. They should at least look at people's portfolios or git to judge them. How is writing an AI passable resume worthy of a callback. I'm only a undergrad so idk
@Ghost_of_Gaby2 ай бұрын
@@theunknown21329 I agree, the system is rigged. A Tip I learned while job hunting; copy the job description and paste it in my resume, then reduce the font size to 1 and change the color to white. So its invisible. No need to worrying about matching keywords. No need to tailor your resume too much to match the company.
@cyberarcher2 ай бұрын
"cheating is not a mistake It's a CHOICE" is my favorite line ever
@That__Guy2 ай бұрын
A better way to do interviews is to ask soft questions. Like what’s their favorite framework and why. What do they like about their work? What is a chore they hate but do when necessary? How did they get into coding? What was the last bug that caused them to go insane? What was their coolest feature they built so far? And so on. These questions are usually so personal that you can’t look them up online. And they provide you with a deeper insight on what the person actually did in practice
@oflameo89272 ай бұрын
I'm taking notes.
@Krapvag2 ай бұрын
Excactly - tell me about a mistake you made, what were the consequences, and how have you adapted from that? Tell me about an unforseen outcome. Copy paste technical questions are dumb in interviews, you want to know what kind of person you're about to spend 40 hours a week working with
@lucasblanc129512 күн бұрын
There is no way I'd hire a freelancer to work with me for some major project and give the guy some of those silly super technical leet exercises. I wanna know if I can trust this person to handle themselves, and communicate and understand our business needs and find good compromises and even speak up if I ask them for a dumb feature that will destroy our productivity.
@laptopuser51982 ай бұрын
Fireship content machine is on overtime. Keep it coming.
@lipschitzlyapunov2 ай бұрын
Who knew that asking interviewees obscure DS&A questions from university that have nothing to do with the day-to-day job and require you to "refresh" those questions every 6 months (or you'll forget) will result in people cheating?
@masterchief15202 ай бұрын
What's your alternative ???? People can't study foundational algorithms and DS you expect them to write real world code lmao. There are millions of people trying for the same job how else do you filter?
@eliantemes7302 ай бұрын
@@masterchief1520 you're a boot licker man, stop responding every comment with the same shit
@RoyLeetcode2 ай бұрын
@@masterchief1520 very true, agree
@jabir57682 ай бұрын
@@masterchief1520 If they're all equally talented just pick the one who you think has the best personality for work ??? Bruh this is the only field where you are in such a weak position constantly proving yourself. CS people are so bad at valuating themselves
@SpookySnek92 ай бұрын
@@masterchief1520the alternative is to ask the applicant to create a very small application (etc) according to your specification. Very simple actually.
@tjwebb74282 ай бұрын
Absolutely interviewed a guy once, years ago, pre-AI boom, that was 100% googling my questions. These weren't even specific programming questions, we were just talking about frameworks or something and I asked what he liked about a certain one. It was like a kid quoting the back page for a book report.
@johnsmith-ro2tw2 ай бұрын
If you don't know the answer, and don't attempt to cheat, honesty is never appreciated by the employer. So, why not try to google/chatGPT stuff as a interviewee ? Either you're good and it works, or the interviewer notices, and you're out anyway.
@_Flow_.2 ай бұрын
I dont need to explain anything, code speaks for itself
@kustafx39112 ай бұрын
Top tier reference
@hwapyongedouard2 ай бұрын
did you write the code by your self ?
@TestTest-co5iw2 ай бұрын
@@hwapyongedouard i wrote my own compiler you god damn ni...
@TomiWebPro2 ай бұрын
Brillant!!!
@StanleyKN2 ай бұрын
I had an interview with a fintech company in Japan. It was my first interview since being employed four years ago. I tried so hard to do 3 leet code questions, and I got 80% correct to pass the test without using any AI or cheating methods. Then I went to the second round with a live coding test and limited time for 5 more coding questions, and I failed at that stage. Honestly, they are asking questions related to the tech stacks they are using, but somehow, they modified it and made it look more tricky and unrealistic. I could only finish 3 of them and then received a rejection letter.
@thtcaribbeanguy2 ай бұрын
ive been coding for almost 8 years, graduated in 2014 in computer science. when i was just left college I WAS EXTREMELY GOOD at these leetcode questions but a DUNCE in actually building systems. now im the opposite where i can build anything to connect to almost anything but i FREEZE up when i get these DS&A that i haven't seen in years! makes me feel so stupid and embarrassing
@masterbogdan2 ай бұрын
Let's be honest, all that super algorithms interviews are bullshit as 100500 interview stages to land that job. All that US hiring completely broken.
@ash052 ай бұрын
Same in Canada too
@Mylordkaz2 ай бұрын
I think it's just that at the end you need a way to find the best in the 10k applications for that react frontend position that you are trying to fill up, and probably that everyone know how to align a div, so algo here we go. we could also play first arrive first serve but... why make it easy when we can make it difficult, need to justify the hiring teams salaries.
@darkwoodmovies2 ай бұрын
Yet people fail at basic algorithms. Nobody gonna ask you to invert a binary tree, but you may be asked to figure out how to implement a cache (which you should be able to do, honestly).
@masterbogdan2 ай бұрын
@@darkwoodmovies for my opinion cache is not algorithm it's method. Algorithm is really last thing what you will do for optimization
@19throse402 ай бұрын
@@masterbogdan Huh? The algorithm is literally the first thing you do for optimization. Algorithms are language agnostic and are "free" runtime and/or memory improvements to a program. No need to think about concurrency or cache misses or garbage collection -- it's literally the easiest and most universal optimization method.
@dailydreamdrive2 ай бұрын
I have a technical interview tomorrow, thank you man 💗💗💗 How it went: I said that my main programming language is JS and the work was about JS but the test was about C# string and array methods sad
@OmneAurumNon2 ай бұрын
Good luck
@n-ju7sv2 ай бұрын
Good luck bro
@Dipj012 ай бұрын
I have one for an unpaid 1 month Java internship, tomorrow.
@dailydreamdrive2 ай бұрын
@@Dipj01 If they actually make you go trough a technical interview for that... Just cheat, you deserve better
@haha7836hahah2 ай бұрын
Sooo Remote control repository it is
@DefaultFlame2 ай бұрын
From what I have seen of "technical interviews" from the outside they are utter garbage already. I don't consider it cheating if the test is already rigged.
@jacobsan2 ай бұрын
Fr. Recently had an amazon test where one of the two questions was so difficult to understand that even chat gpt (after the interview) couldn't understand it (not even for a senior role, but a student role)
@DefaultFlame2 ай бұрын
@jacobsan "Hiring a junior role. Requires 20 years of experience and knowledge of Windows, Linux, C, C++, Java, Fortran, Cobol, Lips, Forth, Haskell, and HTML5."
@esdeathgod17652 ай бұрын
@@jacobsan what was the question like?
@NihongoWakannai2 ай бұрын
@@jacobsan yeah questions which are more like riddles are very dumb
@pikachulovesketchup6662 ай бұрын
@@jacobsanamazon ? I tried the interview just for lulz once. Technical part was fine, but when they asked me to learn some BS "values", they I told them politely to GTFO couple of minutes before the interview.
@Eroenjin2 ай бұрын
I never ask these kinds of interview questions to software developers I am considering hiring. I want to understand what kind of projects they have worked on, I ask quite detailed questions on what kind of structures they discovered when building solutions in previous domains etc. I also ask what in their opinion is the most impressive piece of source code they have seen and why. If they say something classic like Linux kernel, Unix or Bitcoin protocol, I simply ask them to say something a bit more relevant to their past works and why it was impressive. If they have never done any serious development work, they cannot give meaningful answers.
@muhdiversity74092 ай бұрын
Sadly the industry is infested with people that don't practice that think there's some automated way of selecting candidates. You prior history be damned.
@johnwilliams30752 ай бұрын
When I'm interviewing the #1 thing I'm evaluating is what kind of person they are, to see if they'd be a good fit for the team. I've had great teams ruined by hires "placed" there who were either awful individuals or just an awful fit. Put simply, if someone has a good capacity to learn and solid, basic technical skills in my desired subject matter areas I can get them trained up on the specifics they need to be successful. What I can't do is teach them how to not be an asshole....
@Eroenjin2 ай бұрын
@@johnwilliams3075 Yep, you can no longer undo things that should have been learnt at a decent home.
@dealloc2 ай бұрын
That is the way. You get insightful information about the candidate, their experience and knowledge in certain domains and how they got there, which indirectly lets you know how they'd be able to continue learning and succeed if they were on your team. Coding challenges are fine, if 1) they are domain-specific [i.e. use an simple example of a problem that your team had to design around with some constraints], 2) doesn't take more than a few hours to complete, and 3) provides rationale behind decisions made, specific to the task at hand [not why they chose a specific framework or language, but rather why and how they decided on specific data structures, or design to get to the solution based on the constraints laid out]. Every company I've worked at have never asked for a coding challenge, just a technical writeup on hypothetical (or not so hypothetical) questions, and how I'd solve them. Communication is the number one factor. Code by itself is not communication.
@Contrarian_Freethinker2 ай бұрын
Lol I basically ask them what is their 5 year career plan like how I grew preparing for interviews ha
@axa9932 ай бұрын
I kinda support people cheating on Leetcode type questions. Those questions have nothing to do with my suffering in Next-Auth and the fact I've mastered that son of a bitch just like I did many other things that have nothing to do with lame ass low level algorithms
@masterchief15202 ай бұрын
It's the same type questions everybody gets. Same resources that is available for everyone. Don't know what you're moaning about. Not like they're only targeting you with LC.
@thepowerhat2 ай бұрын
If you can't make some homework and study leetcode for a job, this tells a lot about your capacity to get stuff done. You are incriminating yourself
@SpookySnek92 ай бұрын
@@masterchief1520it's just not very relevant to the job. I'm a software engineer, I spend my time building software both at work and at home, I do not wish to steal time from that to train my algorithmic "leetcode skills" in preparation for a job where I will continue to develop software.
@SpookySnek92 ай бұрын
@@thepowerhatit is time lost that could have been spent actually developing software (etc) which would make you better at the job that you're applying to do.
@user-ee1fn4vt8b2 ай бұрын
Mastering anything Next-related is definitely a waste of life
@ryanpmcguire2 ай бұрын
What's funny is that an extremely convoluted cheating technique would be a good reason to make the hire
@dingding48982 ай бұрын
Yess
@flaviolimaj2 ай бұрын
In a technical sense yes, but when you have someone low on morals near you, the thing you want the least is for them to also be highly intelligent and creative
@ryanpmcguire2 ай бұрын
@@flaviolimaj True. Maybe it would be best for crypto projects!
@lucaspham52382 ай бұрын
I can’t even look away from the screen to think during the interview without looking suspicious.
@akashsxo2 ай бұрын
6:10 this is for my ex 💀
@mohdtalha85582 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@jtscsc2 ай бұрын
CS students don't have an ex. Go away 🤔
@AdityaKumar-dv9cp2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@anonymous-g3x1o2 ай бұрын
😂😂
@infernious2 ай бұрын
Ok boomer
@frizzel42 ай бұрын
I've done countless technical interviews, if you can cheat and get away with it; keep the job. Cheat all you want, the rules are fake, game the system.
@arielbatista7ify2 ай бұрын
Tech interviews are getting harder and harder, some of them ask you to do homeworks that I would spend days to do. Usually if I see something like it I'll just decline to do it. Also timeout exams.
@tbkswagg2 ай бұрын
In Hungary Im interviewing currently with 6y of web dev / frontend exp. Either its HR+tech interview zoom call + take home test or sometimes there's even an additional round. It hurts a bit where you dont have something open source or similar to show from recent times. Had a very rough life the last 3-4 years I could only keep my work in balance somewhat lmao. Its always a base app with multiple pages, api calls some state managment, sometimes db+backend work and many times they need you to deploy it, write tests mupltiple kind and sometimes really short deadlines are given. They are not hard at all most times jist tedious and I hate to give out a not fully fledged solution so I tend to take up more time than needed. When it fails after u did it it feels like a waste of 6-10 hours.
@pochou82612 ай бұрын
@@tbkswaggcould it be that they just use you to provide a solution for their problems without paying you?
@tbkswagg2 ай бұрын
@@pochou8261 Eh, there was a case where I was suspicious because I had to build a smoothing algorithm and the company in question worked on a video subtitling / recording software which smooths out mouse movement etc to make the vid look cooler. But generally the ez exercises in question are too generic. "Build a websocket connection to a stock API and build a UI to see XYZ charts for that symbol" or some NexJs app with similar baseline stuff. But still, even if they are easy they take time
@darkwoodmovies2 ай бұрын
I hate the homework ones, too much time! But most are easy IMHO, the hard ones for me have always been system design interviews.
@Chairemy2 ай бұрын
The main problem I have with the technical interviews is that they have nothing to do with my job, where I am actually encouraged to use AI. Which yes requires a lot of debugging but especially when working in sections and with canvas is actually a great tool. The problem with these tech interview is that it’s ridiculous that you can instantly get the answers but are just asked to memorize them regardless. It used to be Google now it’s AI that we use for debugging so just taking away that tool doesn’t prove anything outside of the ability to study for a test.
@alexaneals81942 ай бұрын
The problem with many tech interviews is that it is more a display of the hubris of the interviewer that is of trying to see if the person can do the job. Most programming jobs don't need you to be able to develop a linked list (even if this is simple to do in C) or any other data structure. What they need you to be able to do is know when to use a linked list and when not to. I have been asked to write some complicated SQL query only to get the job and find out any simple sql query would have satisfied the job requirements.
@DoctorMandible2 ай бұрын
I use online learning and research at my job constantly. Technical interviews should simply accept that and then focus on who is good at doing that research quickly and correctly.
@jakezepeda12672 ай бұрын
I would be lost without google and the spuls brave enough to ask questions on stack overflow.
@gloweye2 ай бұрын
If your interview process can be cheated that easily, then your interview process is bad, and you don't deserve good employees.
@Cahangir2 ай бұрын
Honestly though. If you can't come up with a coding task that AI isn't able to solve, then your whole recruiting process sucks.
@ydfhlx59232 ай бұрын
Exactly. If AI is better than people at getting hired, but much worse at actual job - then perhaps your hiring process is wrong.
@darkwoodmovies2 ай бұрын
Nobody actually asks Leetcode questions though. They're all modified custom questions, for which, as the video said, AI does pretty badly on.
@lu2000luk2 ай бұрын
4 FIRESHIP VIDEOS IN A WEEK!?! AM I DREAMING!?
@SeJeYeX2 ай бұрын
What a timing, just got rejected due to not performing well enough in the technical interview - Sadge
@Powaup2 ай бұрын
Keep it up, something will land. I’m in the same boat
@rj78552 ай бұрын
+1
@aliveandwellinisrael25072 ай бұрын
Aw damn. Keep at it!
@js-gc2hk2 ай бұрын
should stop watching Twitch to perform better - RIPBOZO
@dubgoat2 ай бұрын
Let me guess.. AI
@deepjyotideb11732 ай бұрын
Ai
@Logini2282 ай бұрын
Ai.
@youtubian25002 ай бұрын
Aye
@jonasplima2 ай бұрын
Don't guess. Watch the video.
@oseidwomoh2 ай бұрын
Artificial Intelligence.
@exprsyourselfАй бұрын
All I want to add to this is…I am HORRIBLE a pressure/test situations. Period. The most BASIC knowledge flys directly out of my brain in coding interviews. I am VERY good at my job and know what how to write good software. BUT, I can see how AI is VERY helpful for the pointless technical interviews. However, I’ve interviewed enough that I usually ask the recruiter about how the technical interview goes, if it’s a technical conversation where we TALK about problems but don’t write code, I get a job offer nearly EVERY single time. The longer I do this, the less tolerance I have for technical interviews in the first place. They prove absolutely nothing.
@SW-fh7he2 ай бұрын
Don't hate the player, hate the game.
@youarethecssformyhtml2 ай бұрын
hate both 🤡
@NH-hq7ly2 ай бұрын
Same quote passes around from cheaters.
@SW-fh7he2 ай бұрын
@@NH-hq7ly the whole system is rigged, so who cares?
@WHAT_TAHW2 ай бұрын
Dont hate people who create anti-trust situations? cool
@AdamFiregate2 ай бұрын
Don't hate, just chill.
@jarradwilder2 ай бұрын
Best tech interview: I share my screen showing an app that my company built, with some intentionally added bugs. I tell the candidate the problem like I'm a customer and they guide me through bug fixing.
@mrguiltyfoolКүн бұрын
I work as a full stack dev essentially i use chatgpt for my day to day work so essentially any prompt engineers with some programming background can do most dev work
@purplelord85312 ай бұрын
If the problem is a reused leetcode problem I would be pretty pissed if it was called cheating. I took two mid-low level tech interviews so far and they both used third-parties that do a decent job at coming up with unique problems. I know that's not the best sample size, but my point is that it's totally crazy that someone could ruin your reputation while not doing their job :/ i guess that's the world we live in
@Faizan293532 ай бұрын
I mean that's how Exams work, In here. Many new questions in the papers are from the past 5 years So a person did not studied whole year but Knows answer to those question can easily get more marks than a person who studied each concept in detail but Did not pay much attention to those questions (still recommended as You can self write, and Your knowledge carries over so you can still Write something)
@purplelord85312 ай бұрын
@@Faizan29353 I'm fine with losing their games during hiring. knowing the google questions during the google interview probably has some indication of how dedicated I would be as an employee, or that I'm specifically trying to cheat google, or whatever but I don't like a massive corporation can stain an individual's reputation. I am just whining here because I can't do anything about it
@oreivankovic73182 ай бұрын
"Cheating is not a mistake, it´s a choice" is the hardest thing i ever heard
@solitaryfox692 ай бұрын
"Proprietary questions" is crazy.
@alazyprogrammer2 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for yet another great video! You've been on a roll the last days with your output frequency
@GilchristMcGill2 ай бұрын
0:30 Wait, this says November 22
@Rouge_Parrot2 ай бұрын
Retigga it said Nov 25th
@justinliu77882 ай бұрын
@@Rouge_Parrotno it says 22
@isaiahmartin59352 ай бұрын
Time travel.
@IzzumiPoshaf2 ай бұрын
November 22 is also on Jumada a-Awwal 20 bruh!
@Gredddfe2 ай бұрын
We ended up getting a dozen technical interviews for a recent position. It was an extremely straightforward "Build a basic crud". 4 of them built the frontend using AI.
@JavedAlam-ce4mu2 ай бұрын
How did you know?
@GredddfeАй бұрын
@@JavedAlam-ce4mu Overly verbose code is a tell. Tonnes of bootstrap classes called, far more than necessary. Frontend code comments with formal language, even though the backend comments either don't exist or use a different tone of language. But the main tell is when the backend and frontend functionality don't match up. Eg the delete on the frontend just splices from the data in the frontend but doesn't call the backend delete route they created.
@JavedAlam-ce4muАй бұрын
@@Gredddfe Wow that's super interesting, thanks!
@seekingcontent43372 ай бұрын
I was using AI to help me land my first SWE job because I hadn't learned how to write test cases yet and I didn't pass other interviews that I didn't use it in. On the job I was an over performer and survived multiple rounds of redundancies during my time there. I was also hired as a mid not a junior because that's the role I applied to. I test really poorly, I'm so bad at coding interviews BUT doing the actual job I'm great at I've been told. I was even told I'm better than all the Senior Devs they let go because I can actually communicate with non technical people too, always respond on time and try my best. I really try to overdeliver as I obviously have imposter syndrome. I use occasionally use AI on the job too but to ask questions not to solve problems however typically I don't need it. I used it like a learning tool more than anything. e.g. "explain how xyz works" or "how to do xyz" "What are the trade offs of xyz vs zyx".
@windws71372 ай бұрын
What do you Actually do in your work
@SIBUK2 ай бұрын
I find that to be the best use of AI as well! I'm always asking it for it's opinion on stuff.
@Ivan-ef5jy2 ай бұрын
Damn it. They stole my idea. I got tired of stupid automated interviews that asked questions about geopolitics and archaic english words and thought in creating my own platform for autocomplete the automated interviews. Now I have more work to do to avoid getting caught.
@dpv2020202 ай бұрын
i think that using an AI to code on tests is not cheating anymore, is just the new way of coding, just understanding how to modify and explain that code is the important part
@crediblesalamander80562 ай бұрын
i really think so. i still code from scratch, but i have no qualms about using AI for debugging or suggestions and i ask questions if there's something it spits out that i don't understand. it's also great for remembering obscure syntax. i really don't see the issue in using it, it's a great tool.
@MedicAthlete24W2 ай бұрын
It’s still cheating if you are being tested. You are expected to know the code and how to structure it
@dpv2020202 ай бұрын
@@MedicAthlete24W coding is constantly evolving, using IA is just a new way of it.
@KinreeveNaku2 ай бұрын
We believe we had this happen with a new hire from 4 months ago. We struggled to teach him at all for the most part and he could not do his work in any appreciable capacity without repeated support. We think he was using an LLM to get the answers and confidently and aggressively give the answers. None of it lines up with the person we came to know over the next few months, and became exhausting to deal with until the company told us to we could let him go…
@Anshulsharma19952 ай бұрын
Text says "November 22nd". Good to see the best ones making mistakes boosts confidence in us beginners.
@AliKamelAliC2 ай бұрын
He probably intended to upload it earlier and postponed it, but forgot to change the date. Nice attention to detail, though.
@software_development2 ай бұрын
It’s not the that big of a mistake, not even one to point out. Relax.
@Fatman3052 ай бұрын
Noice
@aliveandwellinisrael25072 ай бұрын
plot twist: he used AI and it screwed up
@AliKamelAliC2 ай бұрын
@aliveandwellinisrael2507 lol
@joed93052 ай бұрын
I recently had a person faking knowledge in a tech interview with AI. Once I got suspicious I began to ask questions that I knew chatbots would struggle with since they would hallucinate or go off on strange tangents, and then kept asking follow up questions to get more and more nonsense. Eventually I blatantly asked if they were using a chatbot and got them to admit sheepishly and the guy acted from that point on like a child caught with their hand in a cookie jar. However, I didn't really consider it cheating, but I also didn't think the person was qualified for the position. In my mind, if the person can use AI to come up with better explanations, better code, etc. then just think of it like a tool you'd have on the job, like a calculator. However, the person didn't know enough to guardrail the AI, so they would have been better off without it.
@vinc69662 ай бұрын
The timing is incredible bro, in 15 hours I have an interview for ML Engineer
@OmneAurumNon2 ай бұрын
Good luck
@braineaterzombie39812 ай бұрын
Ehh the interviewer is probably gonna ask about linear regression or logistic regression anyways
@vinc69662 ай бұрын
@@braineaterzombie3981at this point I am prepared to give an entire 1.5 hour lecture about each of them. What I am more scared of is live-coding since the last time I had to “invert a binary tree” was during my last year of college
@Cahangir2 ай бұрын
Would love to know what SQL questions they asked you. Please, keep us updated.
@Ari-pq4db2 ай бұрын
What questions did they ask you, kindly let us know please !!
@Newwinggarage2 ай бұрын
"Cheating is not a mistake. It's a choice." This statement goes hard as hell.
@sushantlanghi20982 ай бұрын
got an interview tomorrow boys pray for me
@Dipj012 ай бұрын
Good luck man, I have one too.
@kinghowler77042 ай бұрын
lol, were you looking for cheating tips??🤣🤣🤣
@Jiloh52 ай бұрын
gluck maaaan
@aliveandwellinisrael25072 ай бұрын
Good luck! Make Claude proud!
@chryst98762 ай бұрын
How'd it go?
@Nodsaibot2 ай бұрын
its ok to lie on your interview because recruiter lied about workload and scope
@gianluca48902 ай бұрын
No, it's not ok to lie because you most probably we'll be asked to do stuff you don't know and probably don't even interest you. I see no point in applying to a job you have no knowledge for (in most cases also no interest, because otherwise you would have studied the topic) and then lying to get it. It would just end up miserably for both you and the company. But in the end we're all human and make bad choices.
@adaroben11042 ай бұрын
@@gianluca4890 "I see no point..." Eating
@Nodsaibot2 ай бұрын
@@gianluca4890 you fake it till you make it, how you think supervisors got their job??
@odvova2 ай бұрын
@@gianluca4890, money lol
@gianluca48902 ай бұрын
@@adaroben1104 Just go work at McDonald's then (meals are also included).
@Gredddfe2 ай бұрын
In-person technical interviews are all well and good, but I've seen senior devs have a nervous breakdown and fail because they're given a laptop with an IDE, console and browser, and told "Here's a set of requirements now start coding". That's not how devs operate. Most devs, even experienced ones, have never written a brand new project. Nor do they code on an unfamiliar device with two people watching them the whole time.
@Toleich2 ай бұрын
To be fair, if you're a senior dev you should be able to work greenfield. Good sign that they've fell victim to title inflation.
@skillfulfighter232 ай бұрын
Slightly unrelated but also feeds into the point that a lot of devs end up having very narrow scope - I don't know the word for it, but they won't be able to set up the project (devops/build settings, etc) but they'll be able to add additional features given an already working codebase. Tell them to make it from scratch? They can't do it.
@Daijyobanai2 ай бұрын
@@Toleich got to disagree. I worked a job for 6 years and they never gave me greenfield projects, even though I asked multiple times. So I set about doing it my own time, but with a full working week, commute, and family, how am I meant to find the time? Managed to spin up a few basic home projects but ultimately, keeping up is near impossible. A senior position can take many directions, one being that you code less and manage more.
@Toleich2 ай бұрын
@@Daijyobanai Fair enough. It's rare that a senior is tasked with a greenfield project. Most if not all of my career has been maintaining and extending legacy systems. If you want greenfield, you need to take a risk and work in start-ups.
@webentwicklungmitrobinspan693527 күн бұрын
over the last 2 years i finished more projects then ever and produced much, much more code. but i would be absolutly unable to code from scratch, just because i am simply missing the syntax of it and i have to look it up. someone interviewing me would think that i know nothing and yet i clearly do in practice. its absurd.
@SeRoShadow2 ай бұрын
the interview questions seem so outdated. An entry-level / junior should never be asked to implement a library and expect seniors to use it. Currently learning DSA, understanding/using is not the problem, implementation is. Interview questions should be catered to the project needs, not a bullet-list of non-sense. Most devs say they don't apply things from the interview for a reason. They either can't identify the need use said DS or are not allowed to create their own DS.
@THEROOT11112 ай бұрын
Cheating is not cheating, it's how corporates operate, get real humble peasants.
@aliveandwellinisrael25072 ай бұрын
It's always "ok when we do it"
@darkwoodmovies2 ай бұрын
Everyone "cheats". That's how life works. If you don't choose the path of least resistance, somebody else will and they'll beat you to it.
@intprogrammer8601Ай бұрын
A lot of times, I get stuck on how to get started on a lot of these coding questions and just need a clue. Like is it a 2 pointer? Or tree bfs? Having chatgpt provide a clue would be HUGE since I often waste like half of the interview time figuring this part out.
@notKhalid2 ай бұрын
the hardest part of a job is getting it, once you're through devs in MNCs pretty much do petty changes in code everyday throughout the day, and get paid huge sums for that, so in my opinion the pros of cheating hugely overcome the cons, and if you can cheat and not get caught and get the job, you actually deserve the job man 😂
@salvationindustries2 ай бұрын
"Cheating is not a mistake, it's a choice." is a great line.
@xerogaming21272 ай бұрын
Main reason to cheat is the pressure of landing the job . Most candidates cheat . In a given time constraints and high pressure , even a good programmer can fail to deliver . Programming is about solving the problem in optimal way and sometimes solving a problem may take 30 seconds or 4 days . A good company not only takes a reasonable assessment but also checks on your previous projects , ask questions on it just to get to know what the person is capable of .
@_aullik2 ай бұрын
I opened chatgpt in a code interview and used it when i had to. I however did not hide that from the interviewer. No i did not spend many hours preparing for the interview learning dozens of stupid interview questions, i just did the job of a programmer. As long as you can argue for it you are fine, if the company is not fine with that, they are probably not worth working for.
@jediknight98962 ай бұрын
Did you land the job by doing this?
@HT792 ай бұрын
I think it should be good as long as you don't ask it to spoonfeed you. For example, asking it to breakdown the question into small manageable components should be fine but blindly copy pasting the code without understanding the logic should be a big no no
@_aullik2 ай бұрын
@@jediknight9896 yes, but it was a smaller company. They asked me why i opened it and i told them that thats my job. When you are programming you constantly get into situations where you have to look something up or find a solution to a problem that you know/expect has been solved before. Being able to use tools like chatgpt is part of the job.
@_aullik2 ай бұрын
@@HT79 breaking down the question is the part you have to do. Just asking chatgpt how to solve something will often lead to more problems than it helps. However you can ask AI to do standard things for you, or ask it about a certain algorithm that you don't remember exactly. Or maybe ask it for alternative algorithms for a situation. You often have to lead the AI to the solution or just take pointers and more often than not, you can't just copy paste generated code that is more than a few lines. However AI is still a powerful tool that you should learn how to use. Showing that you can use it is not the worst thing to happen in a job interview.
@kunven2 ай бұрын
I will never forget the time 2 companies sent me the same technical requirement they wanted me to develop as a test. I literally sent them the same cloned repo with different names. P.S I still didn't get hired
@12316231231231239Ай бұрын
😂 what did they answer you?
@13thravenpurple942 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Much appreciated 💜
@V1kToo2 ай бұрын
I am now doing interviews not only presuming the use of LLMs, but encouraging it.
@BalkanGeopolitics22 ай бұрын
I'm currently studying programming and i plan on working as one. So this video on where to find leaked technical interviews is great just because it will help me practise for said interview. My friend who has finished and got a degree for programming has also helped me guide me, but still nice to know this. I'm literally cave man when it comes to where to find right information 😆😃
@ZFCaio2 ай бұрын
Technical interviews are a joke Imagining testing every single professional you hire, your dentist, your plumber JUST HIRE ME BASED ON MY EXPERIENCE
@Nischal.shetty022 ай бұрын
What about freshers then. (Ig you could tell projects but that's not a solid metric ig)
@siliconhawk2 ай бұрын
bro they want like 69 years of experience for a fresher 😭😭 bro if you don't even hire me as a intern for what is essentially minimum wage how am i supposed to get experience. the current market is a joke
@tauzN2 ай бұрын
As said the the video: the market is competitive. Dentist or plumber are not...
@majnushetty55832 ай бұрын
Don't dentists go over years of training and get certified before even beginning to work? It's not the same with programmers
@sktfangirl2 ай бұрын
Technical interviews are for hiring young talent that you can pay less than a 20 years of experience programmer.
@gtleshowАй бұрын
Your video editor needs a raise!!
@samarbid132 ай бұрын
Why call it cheating? Using tools like Google or a calculator shouldn’t be considered cheating, it should be encouraged instrad! In the real world, we rely on these tools, and a strong candidate is someone who can identify bad answers and solve problems effectively using all available resources. The focus of the interviewer should be on candidate ability of problem-solving with all tools available, not restricting helpful tools, I think this approach its not helping anyone!
@NihongoWakannai2 ай бұрын
Because the point of an interview is to use a small amount of time to judge how you will perform on long tasks. If you want to be tested in a "real world" way then the test will last a week where you have to implement a real feature. If you can't solve a small problem without chatgpt helping you then you're not going to be able to solve larger issues in the real job.
@aliveandwellinisrael25072 ай бұрын
Hey, it should count for something if you're using Google while interviewing for Google
@TigerAlert2 ай бұрын
I agree with you, interview should be : using available tools to solve programming problem as efficient as possible (speed + quality). Why it's cheating : because it's not part of the rule of the interview until you find an interview that allows it. Similar to school, exams are usually without notes, but sometimes they allow them. Depends on the rules of the interviewer.
@Garkolym2 ай бұрын
Questions are not related to real world. I have never implemented a binary tree
@JavedAlam-ce4mu2 ай бұрын
Well you should. Every programmer should implement a red black tree or at least a binary search tree for learning purposes.
@Garkolym2 ай бұрын
@@JavedAlam-ce4mu Companies unsettle you with hardcore math things to get you to lower your starting salary. At the end you do SQL, backend and frontend
@sorae422 ай бұрын
@@JavedAlam-ce4mu”for learning purposes” when i could take time, search it up and implement it without a single bit of memorization, that’s how you learn, not memorizing.
@JavedAlam-ce4muАй бұрын
@@sorae42 I never said to memorise how to do it. I said every programmer should do it once, specifically so they understand how they work, and how to build other things using the same concepts. I definitely do not mean memorise it, as it's not an effective way to consolidate knowledge. The best way is to attempt to implement it yourself based on your understanding of the concept, and only look up things if you get truly stuck.
@alepouna2 ай бұрын
2:33 i snorted
@JaredQueiroz2 ай бұрын
"But if you can pull that off you deserve the job" bro XD
@KAZVorpalАй бұрын
The whiteboard coding challenge is asinine. Like the LeetCode BS, this does not represent doing the real job. They're trying to "gotcha" someone without regard to their actual ability.
@WackoMcGoose2 ай бұрын
1:42 I... what the KZbin even _is_ this "magical string" question, I've read over it several times, along with the examples, and I _still_ don't know how it's asking me to generate the string???
@swapnilraj36532 ай бұрын
When you need to create a video to accommodate the sponsor 😂😂. No hard feelings. Great Fan of yours.
@ChristopherCricketWallace2 ай бұрын
Employers use AI to hire, replace, and then fire you; but you can't use AI to get hired in the first place. More pulling up the ladder IMHO.
@SANDVlCH2 ай бұрын
Had a few of these cheats in some candidates I was vetting last year, but it’s painfully obvious whenever they come up
@jc918a-322 ай бұрын
I find the very concept of cheating challenging when it comes to software development. On the one hand, you must understand the problem and have some intuition on how to programmatically achieve the solution. But choosing to use AI to generate that code and solution, or write the code itself, and calling one of them "cheating", looks disingenous to me. Of course I can understand where you're coming from, but I understand it's just a choice of how to bridge the gap between the problem and the potential solution
@robrider8382 ай бұрын
Any tech question is stupid if it can be answered by AI. It's like asking someone to multiply 3.14159 by 42 just as calculators were becoming widely adopted.
@floskater992 ай бұрын
How is it cheating to use AI? When working for the company I'd use AI too, so why can I not use it in an interview?
@HT792 ай бұрын
Not in highly secure fintechs where everything is built in-house (even the core libraries) and access to AI tools is forbidden for obvious reasons.
@js-gc2hk2 ай бұрын
@@HT79 but the day companies would make their own AI wouldn't they just not need employees anymore if someone can manage it on their own by then. lets just say I own my own robots and they can do way better already in 2045 and won't need humans anymore to start my own company to run against other big ones
@webentwicklungmitrobinspan693527 күн бұрын
@@HT79 but not everyone works in highly secure fintechs (btw even they use hosted ai's that are comparable..)
@DyslexicAnaboko2 ай бұрын
Pro tip. If you conduct interviews, never, under any circumstances let the interviewee or recruiters have a copy of your questions. I designed all of my questions to defeat this exact problem being described in this video. I have politely declined people on getting copies. It took me many hours to craft my questions and they have yet to fail me. Of course they age like the rest of the industry so it's important to keep them updated. Im like on version 3. Due for another update honestly.
@user-p8q8s2 ай бұрын
Sorry, I don't quite understand? Why don't you want the interviewee to have a copy of the questions?
@DyslexicAnaboko2 ай бұрын
@@user-p8q8sbecause they will publicise it making it useless. Also they will prep their buddies for the exam if someone else goes to the same interview. I have interviewed a lot of people and it blows my mind how many people are unqualified for the job. They think because they have pretty certificates or somehow fell ass backwards into a microsoft job they don't have to answer even the most basic of questions. My questions are crafted so that only serious developers can answer them. I don't care what technologies you have worked with, if you can't answer the basics then it's "Thank you for your time, you will hear next steps from your recruiter."
@emperor8716Ай бұрын
5:03 I’ve never had a technical interview before but dude it’s pretty obvious why people cheat in them. It’s always the same stupid leetcode questions that have no use in the actual job but you have to spend months on to memorize. People are sick of it.
@aromaticsnail2 ай бұрын
It's amazing how much is expected from candidates, including ethics, compared to the companies recruiting...tells a lot about the world we live in.
@haxking22 ай бұрын
Imagine landing a job at Google and your co-workers can't even solve TwoSum
@aliveandwellinisrael25072 ай бұрын
I wonder how many of they/them stroked out at the binary tree problem
@Appalachian79222 ай бұрын
Medicine is an interesting iteration of this problem too. Lots of applicants to residency/fellowship are great interviewers and test takers but bad doctors. Great at answering standard questions which appear on professional guidelines, but when seeing a patient with multiple issues or an atypical presentation of one issue, the forest is lost to the trees.
@_vindicator_2 ай бұрын
5:30 if you can pull that off you should work for the NSA not fang
@trailerhaul82002 ай бұрын
"There are three ways to make a living in this business: be first, be smarter, or cheat." - John Tuld
@aloe24542 ай бұрын
As an expert in the field of IT, I can certify this is accurate. We don't have friends
@VaibhavShewale2 ай бұрын
some tech interview questions are riduculuos and sometimes people also forget the exact name and that momement they get rejected for no reason so having little bit cheating is okay only if they know how things works
@johnmccain38772 ай бұрын
5:46 - Twitter :) Nice job Ilon, brand recognition is top kek
@AndriiMarusiak2 ай бұрын
Every employer says that we need to solve customer problems and every employer is upset because you really use any opportunity to solve problems, even cheating. If I found out that an employee had cheated without anyone finding out, I would be happy, because he really has imagination and knows how to solve any problem. I would like to have such a person as an ally, not an enemy
@ITS_AWESOME_472 ай бұрын
1:59 So technically what if you have autism in your resume even though you don't have it ..
@KristianTheDesigner2 ай бұрын
I actually had my very first technical interview the day you released this video, BUT, i didnt watch it until now 😁
@IzzumiPoshaf2 ай бұрын
I think this Video was Uploaded around 01.27 (1.27 am) Western Indonesia Time (UTC+7) according to KZbin Metadata?
@inzaghiposumaalkahfi96502 ай бұрын
Yes, every Fireship Uploads a Video about the Code Report, it's always on during every Sleeping Hour and above 12 am.
@beneven162 ай бұрын
The Hans Niemann reference was wild lol
@KurzedMetal2 ай бұрын
I got it too, I was searching for someone to comment on this :3
@toxaq2 ай бұрын
Technical interviews are a dumb way to find talent. Take people on the naturally socially awkward side of life and throw them into an unnatural social situation and expect them to show their best qualities... Don't work for these companies.
@joshuarmost2 ай бұрын
My anxiety increases every time I watch a video about having to get a job as a computer science major