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| | #1 |
| C++ Enthusiast Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: MI
Posts: 532
| Programmer Interview Is anyone willing to be my interviewee? I'd greatly appreciate it, and you'd get your name cited in a high school research paper. Thanks!!
__________________ Trinity: "Neo... nobody has ever done this before." Neo: "That's why it's going to work." c9915ec6c1f3b876ddf38514adbb94f0 |
| jmd15 is offline | |
| | #2 |
| Devil's Advocate Join Date: May 2004 Location: Out of scope
Posts: 3,778
| Question 1: How, as a professional programmer, would you go about writing a program in Java that calculates the test scores of a class and outputs the results in report card format in alphabetical order by student name? Just some humor... I can't help you, I'm still working on my degree.
__________________ Terms of Service By quoting or replying directly to this post, you consent to the fact that all of the information in the post above is completely accurate and highly intelligent and no comments will be made towards its validity, thoughtlessness, and/or grammatical structure. Violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. |
| SlyMaelstrom is offline | |
| | #3 |
| Malum in se Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,188
| My degree is in Electronics Engineering. I program every day. From what ive seen of the R&D side of things most people who do alot of programming have their degrees in other areas and require programming in addition to their primary discipline. People with (only) a CS degree arent generally favored for these positions. I dont have a degree in CS yet, Im considering getting one, just for the piece of paper, but I dont honestly need one to be a programmer. The best and worst programmers tend to be self taught.
__________________ Until you can build a working general purpose reprogrammable computer out of basic components from radio shack, you are not fit to call yourself a programmer in my presence. This is cwhizard, signing off. |
| abachler is offline | |
| | #5 |
| Super Moderator Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,817
| Cannot help you as my degree is in another area. |
| Bubba is offline | |
| | #6 |
| C++ Enthusiast Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: MI
Posts: 532
| I appreciate all the responses! After checking it out further, I believe that the paper would allow for me to interview someone working as a computer programmer, even if they don't have a degree in Computer Science.
__________________ Trinity: "Neo... nobody has ever done this before." Neo: "That's why it's going to work." c9915ec6c1f3b876ddf38514adbb94f0 |
| jmd15 is offline | |
| | #7 |
| Devil's Advocate Join Date: May 2004 Location: Out of scope
Posts: 3,778
| Ok, well, I can help you then... however, I'm just a grunt. I would suggest someone with more professional experience. I know there are plenty on this forum.
__________________ Terms of Service By quoting or replying directly to this post, you consent to the fact that all of the information in the post above is completely accurate and highly intelligent and no comments will be made towards its validity, thoughtlessness, and/or grammatical structure. Violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. |
| SlyMaelstrom is offline | |
| | #8 |
| C++ Enthusiast Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: MI
Posts: 532
| Alright, well I'm going to post a document with my 10 interview questions, and anyone who'd be willing to can fill it out and email it to me at jmd AT linuxmail.org, post a reply with it as an attachment, or PM me with it. However you'd like would be fine with me. If able, I may use more than one of the interviews in my research paper, and I'll be sure those I use are properly cited as a reference. The only real requirements to fill out the interview are as follows: Currently employed as a computer programmer Willing to submit your name and company name Have used Windows and Linux at some point Thanks everyone!
__________________ Trinity: "Neo... nobody has ever done this before." Neo: "That's why it's going to work." c9915ec6c1f3b876ddf38514adbb94f0 |
| jmd15 is offline | |
| | #9 | |
| Malum in se Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,188
| Quote:
Name(first and last): A. Bachler Company Name: Withheld Official Job Title: Senior Engineer 1. How did you get into computer programming as a career? My degree in Electronics Engineering and extensinve experience programming PLC's gave me a specific advantage for teh position I am in now, which involes hard/software interfaces between various cameras and computers for machine vision applications. 2. As a youth, what was your job of choice? Is it still the same now? If not, what is it? Research scientist. Yes, same choice. 3. Do you like your job? Why or why not? I enjoy the work I do. It involves a lot of creative problem solving. 4. If you could work for any company as a programmer, which company and why? My current employer keeps me paid and interested. 5. At your job(professionally), what OS have you worked on most often? Windows, Linux is simply not supported by enough hardware manufacturers and lacks a coherent standard API. 6. Personally, what OS do you use and why? Windows, for all the above reasons, and it supports more games. 7. Do you prefer to use Windows or Linux? Windows, see the above reasons. 8. Which OS would you prefer to code for? Windows, see the above reasons. 9. From 1-10(10 being the best) how would you rank Linux and Windows and why? Windows ranks a 9, it has some issues, but Microsoft does a far better job of supporting developers than anything there is for Linux. Linux ranks a 7. Its an interesting alternative, but frankly the linux community has its head up its ass trying to be some kind of counter culture movement against windows. The end result is that linux is just a klunky mess of code that runs fine once its set up but takes too long to deploy and doesnt support enough hardware for highly specialized applications. Linux may be 'free' but its not worth the price in retraining or lack fo technical support. 10. What are the best and worst things about being a computer programmer? The work is interesting and the pay is better than average, but the hours can be long.
__________________ Until you can build a working general purpose reprogrammable computer out of basic components from radio shack, you are not fit to call yourself a programmer in my presence. This is cwhizard, signing off. Last edited by abachler; 10-28-2007 at 06:40 PM. | |
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