|
|
|
|
|
by void_mint
1722 days ago
|
|
> Yes, I think to a large degree being able to build hard technology is a matter of being extremely fluent with writing code and reasoning about data structures and algorithms Sure. Again. I don't really think an algorithm that shows up as an introduction to algorithm proves much more than a person read "Intro to Algorithms". So again, a timed introductory problem proves some elite technical skill? > If you don't agree with me that the fluency I described is a significant asset to advancing the state of the art in CS You're building a cute lil strawman. I think the question is totally out of line with the stated goal. If a college sophomore can answer a question, you're not really assessing much of anything. Also, working at a "hard startup" has nothing to do with "advancing the state of the art in CS". > what do you think a significant asset is? If I'm handling hiring for a "hard startup" and am in search of engineers fit for an "extraordinary team", I'm probably going to spend more time finding applicable skills than opening up to Chapter 1 in the closest algorithms book. |
|
In my observation the default state of a student reading a textbook is it goes in one ear and out the other. Most students temporarily acquire a superficial understanding of the concepts which allows them to answer test questions and get a decent grade. To see something in the wild and instantly recognize that it's isomorphic to a concept you studied years ago requires a level of mastery/passion well beyond what it takes to get an A. (I'm talking about school in general here, of course the fact that interviews index so heavily on data structures/algorithms ends up distorting things a lot from the baseline. Still, if you solve this problem in 10 minutes you're one helluva sophomore.)
>Also, working at a "hard startup" has nothing to do with "advancing the state of the art in CS".
I think of "hard technology" like rethinkdb as being exactly equivalent to cutting edge stuff that advances the state of the art in some way... again, maybe there's just been a misunderstanding/miscommunication here