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by potatoz2 1913 days ago
People in China often don't speak fluent English because they grow up in a country where it's not a spoken language.

People who don't contribute to OSS typically don't do it because they don't have the ability (some OSS code is held together by duct tape) but because they don't have time, interest or think it's harder than it is.

If you have better tools to determine if someone is good at writing code for your company, why use a proxy measure that's different in many ways?

1 comments

Unless I’ve worked with you or someone that I deeply trust has and will vouch for you, I don’t have any stronger signal of your coding and teamwork abilities than a strong OSS contribution history can provide.

It’s rare for an interview process to provide more than 6 hours of content, some of which is non-evaluatable. Reference checks are all but useless compared to seeing actual work over time.

About 1 time in 6, you’ll interview a full standard deviation above or below your “true” ability. About 1 time in 50, you’ll turn in a +2σ (or -2σ) performance. That’s largely eliminated with personal experience, a trusted vouch, or a strong OSS portfolio.