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by hackinthebochs 3157 days ago
And I bet those are exactly the kinds of things you're interested in and could answer. What about people who just aren't interested in maven dependency management (seems awfully uninteresting to me)? If your process is set up to find people who think like you and are interested in the exact same things you are, your process is broken.

And just to be constructive: you have a nugget of a good idea, that a technologist should have fairly detailed knowledge in some domain of interest. Finding what those areas are and getting them to speak about it beyond a superficial level of detail might be a good hiring criteria.

1 comments

And that's one of the things done by companies in other businesses, who don't seem to have the same sorts of hiring problems that software companies do.

I'm an electrical engineer, and I've never been asked to design something from scratch in an interview. I have been shown existing design drawings or products and asked questions about them, which leads to various discussions. What we do in interviews is talk, both about what the company works on and about what I've worked on.

I agree with your idea of a proxy. Others seem to be interpreting it as asking trivia questions about your favorite pet projects and technologies. I don't think that's what you're doing.

In any given specialty, I think good developers will pick up the stuff around that specialty. Java devs will learn about Maven and git and maybe some JVM customizations to tweak memory usage. Rails devs will learn about which gems are widely-used to solve specific problems, and git, and maybe some devops/deployment stuff with SSH keys and Capistrano.

The particulars matter less than that there's some amount of holistic knowledge of their specialty. Of course one can argue the specifics (what if they've used svn but never touched git, etc)... but if there are no specifics -- if the candidate only knows their specific language of choice but nothing outside of it -- I would argue that they're probably not that great.