Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by kodah 2050 days ago
This comment really just drives home the nail of how awful the state of interviewing, and especially the mental state of some interviewers, in this industry with a backhoe bucket.

I really just want to thank you for putting this useless mentality on display.

2 comments

Next time there's a tech interview discussion and someone defends it, linking this thread will be very useful.

Almost 30 years of BDFL of Python, sorry don't care, go do 200 leetcode before talking to us. And if you don't spit out the answer a few seconds faster than that fresh graduate, clearly you're a lesser engineer and should be rejected.

I know it's not Microsoft, but D. E. Shaw asked Larry Summers math puzzles when he interviewed there. At the time, he was the president of Harvard University.

I think it's my favorite example of how crazy some interview processes can get, lol.

I’m not sure what’s crazier to me: asking someone to demonstrate a live proficiency of an abstract skill that is only tangentially related to that actual day-to-day activities of a role or just assuming that because someone has some high credential that they would be good in a given role.
DE Shaw is a financial company filled with maths guys, doing statistical analysis and modeling all day. A math puzzle is the most normal question you could be asked there.

The real question is why Larry Summers is going to a quant interview? Did he apply for a quant role?

They hired him as a managing director.
For many roles at a hedge fund, being able to do mathematics quickly and intuitively is a valuable skill. Not sure why an economist applying for an MD job would need to be tested on that, though.
He should have called their bluff and failed the quiz on purpose. What are they going to do?