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40 votes
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Microsoft’s ‘World of Warcraft’ gaming staff votes to unionize
33 votes -
Are you a hiring manager/recruiter in tech? In this Circus Funhouse Mirror tech economy, how do candidates even get an interview?
I've been a hiring manager before across a few jobs. But, then, I was receiving maybe 50 resumes to screen a week with my recruiter. Y'all are, what, at a few factors to an order of magnitude more...
I've been a hiring manager before across a few jobs. But, then, I was receiving maybe 50 resumes to screen a week with my recruiter. Y'all are, what, at a few factors to an order of magnitude more than that?
Are your recruiters now pre-filtering resumes before you see them? What is being used to determine whether a candidate gets an interview now?
What I'm seeing:
- Referrals almost never matter: I've gotten two interviews through my network after dozens of applications—and I'm fairly well networked.
- Experience at other well-known Tech companies doesn't get an interview
- Having the right skill set, based on the job description doesn't get an interview.
From the outside, it seems like a coin flip.
Meanwhile, I have LinkedIn's AI advisor routinely giving me flavors of "yes, you're definitely their kind of candidate" yet no responses after weeks followed by the occasional casual rejection email.
So what's happening behind the scenes? How do resumes get on your radar? How do you work from the deluge to hiring a human?
Sincerely,
A very experienced engineer and manager who is rather fed up with what seems like a collection of pseudo-random number generator contemporary hiring processes.EDIT: I should have also included recruiters in the title of my ask.
56 votes -
IT professionals and therapists
If you are an I.T. professional have you ever talked to a therapist about career/job related angst and felt that they just didn't fully understand beyond a superficial level?
20 votes -
Danecdotes: Reminiscences and Reflections Concerning a Largely Wasted Life
9 votes -
The rich world’s teachers are increasingly morose. Hanging on to the best of them is getting harder.
43 votes -
Bethesda Game Studios workers have unionized. Not the same as the QA union. This time it’s “wall to wall”…
50 votes -
Microsoft laid off a DEI team, and its lead wrote an internal email blasting how DEI is 'no longer business critical'
37 votes -
Valve runs its massive PC gaming ecosystem with only about 350 employees
56 votes -
IT staffing agency traps tech workers in their jobs, US federal lawsuit alleges
38 votes -
The rise of the ‘union curious’ - support for unionization among America’s frontline workers
28 votes -
The best and brightest don’t want to stay in Canada. I should know: I’m one of the few in my engineering class who did.
37 votes -
How are AI and LLMs used in your company (if at all)?
I'm working on an AI chat portal for teams, think Perplexity but trained on a company's knowledgebase (prosgpt dot com for the curious) and i wanted to talk to some people who are successfully...
I'm working on an AI chat portal for teams, think Perplexity but trained on a company's knowledgebase (prosgpt dot com for the curious) and i wanted to talk to some people who are successfully using LLMs in their teams or jobs to improve productivity
Are you using free or paid LLMs? Which ones?
What kind of tasks do you get an LLM to do for you?
What is the workflow for accomplishing those tasks?
Cheers,
nmn12 votes -
Five killed and dozens injured in Bangladesh in violent clashes over government jobs quota
14 votes -
Redbox owner (Chicken Soup For The Soul) to liquidate in Chapter 7 bankruptcy shift; workforce of 1,000 to be let go and 24,000 kiosks shut down, lawyer says
24 votes -
In Norway, children walk to school aged six, or even travel across the country. Why do these kids have so much independence, while other countries are so risk-averse?
30 votes -
The American elevator explains why housing costs have skyrocketed
37 votes -
Meet Mercy and Anita – the African workers driving the AI revolution, for just over a dollar an hour
18 votes -
Norwegian and or European salary expectations?
Short version: is there a levels.fyi or equivalent for employees in the European Economic Area (EEA)? How do I figure out what an equivalent employee in Norway makes vs one in the US? Long...
Short version: is there a levels.fyi or equivalent for employees in the European Economic Area (EEA)? How do I figure out what an equivalent employee in Norway makes vs one in the US?
Long version: I just found out my partner got the offer for a job that'll force relocation to Norway from the US for a new role. My current role, schedule, and responsibilities will likely work just fine in Norway and I expect that I can keep my job if I pitch it correctly to the executive team. I need to figure out what:
- I should be making
- What potential hires from Norway or the EEA would need to make
I work as the Head of AI running a team of 4 technical (ML Engineers) and non-technical (Data Capture technicians) people in a Series A startup. I am the Engineering Manager, the Team Lead, the Tech Lead, an IC, and periodically do pre-sales and technical customer support/onboarding. My team is all new, basically, having been hired in the last 90 days or less, and I am excited to delegate after finishing their onboarding! Currently, I have 1% equity and make $200,000. My role is remote and requires 20-30% travel. Where I live now is actually more expensive for flying across the US than from Oslo and about the same time factoring layovers, so travel costs will decrease. Due to how meeting schedules work out, no meetings will have to be moved to accommodate me at all. Is advocating for maintaining the same salary correct or should it decrease given the higher worker protections and benefits required by Norwegian employment law? Separately, what would hiring Norwegian employees look like from a comp perspective? I'd really like to keep this job and make a strong case for why it won't be a huge net-negative for the company.
10 votes -
Job search blues
I’m a software engineer with 4 years of experience in a contract position that ends in a few months, with no renewal or conversion. Previously I was laid off in December 2022 and didn’t find work...
I’m a software engineer with 4 years of experience in a contract position that ends in a few months, with no renewal or conversion. Previously I was laid off in December 2022 and didn’t find work until March 2023, so I’m trying to stay ahead of unemployment by applying for jobs before my contract ends.
Since January I’ve been applying to all sorts of SWE jobs, either tailored to my experience or generalist roles I can fill. I’ve had two interviews, and they were for small on-site companies in my town. One I had to turn down an offer because their company was a nightmare, and the other went with a candidate who had more experience.
I feel demoralized, frustrated, and anxious. Only two interviews in nearly 6 months? I thought the job search in 2023 was rough, but this is ridiculous. I’m confident in my ability to perform above expectations and I think if I could at least get more interviews I wouldn’t be searching for so long.
I assume my resume must be the issue so I’ve rewritten it several times, getting feedback from managers and senior employees while also feeding it through ATS scanners. It’s come a long way but as of recently they all tell me it’s a great resume. They say it should at least get me an interview. And ATS scanners aren’t telling me anything is missing.
Recently I even got an internal referral for a position through a friend of a friend, and my experience lined up nicely with the job description too. I thought this would be a sure thing, most hires come from networking rather than cold applications. Their engineering manager viewed my LinkedIn profile and I’ve since been ghosted. This experience hurt the most, because what else could they want? I feel like I’ve got a sticky note on my back that says do not hire instead of kick me!
I can’t be alone in this experience. Is anyone else on here struggling in this job market? How long can this go on for and how bad is it going to get?
43 votes -
AI work assistants need a lot of handholding (gifted link)
7 votes -
Inside the Chinese-funded and staffed marijuana farms springing up across the US
25 votes -
Anti-wage-theft laws are kryptonite to dishonest US bosses
29 votes -
Canadian public servants uneasy as government 'spy' robot prowls federal offices
13 votes -
Why tackling accent bias matters at work
35 votes -
AI took their jobs. Now they get paid to make it sound human.
26 votes -
Pieces Interactive, the Embracer-owned studio behind the recent Alone in the Dark remake, has seemingly shut down
7 votes -
Career advice: specializing in niche tech stack vs. finishing first degree
Hello all, was inspired to fish for responses after seeing another user request resume feedback. Apologies if the background is on the longer side. TLDR: Dropped out 10 years ago; have only a high...
Hello all, was inspired to fish for responses after seeing another user request resume feedback. Apologies if the background is on the longer side.
TLDR: Dropped out 10 years ago; have only a high school degree and university transfer credits. Conflicted between finishing my degree online while working full time, vs. specializing in a niche tech stack (Salesforce) via current employment. Looking for any input because I'm prone to decision paralysis.
Background
I'm in a really weird place currently in terms of long term career track. I dropped out of college for computer science a decade ago. The school was a private for-profit (yikes) and I couldn't transfer any credits out. Either way, I was aimless, so I enrolled at a local community college with the intent of transferring to a state 4-year, earn my bachelor's, and figure things out from there. A connection at the community college helped me find full-time employment in a help desk role, so I paused my studies.That help desk role turned into a weird application analyst/developer position that involved configuring applications using a low code platform. I taught myself Python and some super basic React while there, and my crowning achievement was making a hideous set of Python scripts that ended up replacing an automation program that the company couldn't get working anyways. When my boss at that job moved to a new company, he contacted me in the next year to fill a systems analyst position, which in practice was learning Salesforce administration and whatever else third party tech tools the company decides to adopt for projects. I've been here for 1.5 years now. The pay is not amazing for HCOL, but I'm still living with family and the work is fully remote so I'm not complaining.
The best part, actually, is that there's a lot of room for career growth with actual on the job experience... if I teach myself Salesforce development. There's a few other people on my team who all stumbled into Salesforce admin tasks like myself, but none have a CS background so I've already taken on and delivered on some tasks that would previously have gone to a consultant.
I don't know how many folks here work with Salesforce development, but my research tells me that it's a locked ecosystem, incredibly flooded on the entry level by people holding certificates from Salesforce, and a different enough beast from traditional software engineering that X years as a Salesforce developer won't exactly translate to X years of experience when trying to pivot to a software dev role. I already had a difficult time getting any responses back when I tried to apply to junior software dev roles during the pandemic - which could be my resume, but I'm sure the lack of a degree and primary work experience being on low code platforms were not helpful. Either way, the thought of relying on Salesforce for breadwinning is... not something I am "above" by any means, but does trigger a bit of anxiety for the future.
The second option would be to go through some reputable online degree program like WGU or CSU Monterey Bay's CS Online. I've actually been slowly earning credits to transfer to the latter, but I've never been a great self-paced learner. I read that these programs are perfect for people working full time, but I absolutely do not fit the bill for the type of student who can blitz through WGU's program in a year. So both would take me maybe two years to complete if I start in 2025, which is something to the tune of $15-20k USD. I can afford this, but it's not exactly a drop in the bucket either. Dropping work to attend in-person at lower costs at a local university unfortunately is not an option.
If I were driven and disciplined enough, I could do both - learning SF dev on my own time and applying it to work, while also earning my degree - but I'll be honest and say that's just a recipe for disaster. I know me; if I had even a fraction of the discipline required to make that work, I'd have upskilled out of here years back when pandemic hiring at tech companies were at an all time high. That train has come and gone, though.
18 votes -
Generative AI is not going to build your engineering team for you
15 votes -
The latest AI use cases appear to be built specifically for managers and executives, and literally nobody else
30 votes -
Samsung workers in South Korea take industrial action for first time
19 votes -
Founder burnout
3 votes -
The leak of an internal Google database reveals thousands of potential privacy and security issues reported by employees
21 votes -
US sues Hyundai for child labor in Alabama
50 votes -
Using a desktop monitor outside
Hiya folks, I work remotely, and I've got a little deck with a table and umbrella that I like to work at for most of the summer. The trouble is, my umbrella can never be fully angled to shade me...
Hiya folks,
I work remotely, and I've got a little deck with a table and umbrella that I like to work at for most of the summer. The trouble is, my umbrella can never be fully angled to shade me from the sun.
I find my laptop screen (13") to be woeful for working on outside. Not only is it tiny and promotes bad posture, it also doesn't have amazing brightness. Lots of squinting and hunching, depending on the sun!
Every monitor in my house it turns out is 350 nits, except my laptop screen, which is 500 nits.
Does anyone have practical experience lugging a monitor outside and working on it during the sunny day? If so, what brightness gets you over the usability threshold?
It seems like I could get a 1000 nit monitor relatively easily. Anything above 1000 the market seems to narrow quite quickly.
21 votes -
How tens of thousands of grad workers are organizing themselves
12 votes -
AI is making economists rethink the story of automation
15 votes -
Real estate agents are fleeing the field
30 votes -
US, European nations consider vaccinating workers exposed to bird flu
9 votes -
US FDIC chair says he’ll leave job after toxic workplace report
11 votes -
How to build 300,000 airplanes in five years
9 votes -
Embracer cut ties with more than 4,500 employees and cancelled eighty projects, reducing its headcount by 27% in twelve months
28 votes -
No wrong doors
14 votes -
Pixar: Layoffs hit storied animation studio
22 votes -
The inside story of Elon Musk’s mass firings of Tesla Supercharger staff
36 votes -
How makers of nonconsensual AI porn make a living on Patreon
15 votes -
The forged Apple employee badge
25 votes -
Seattle’s law mandating higher pay for food delivery workers is a case study in backfire economics
18 votes -
US survey shows abortion bans drive away young talent
52 votes -
US Supreme Court denies California’s plea for immunity for COVID-19 deaths at San Quentin prison
18 votes