ā j4ck š„¶ icebreaker.xyz ā
@j4ck.eth
if you are ā¢ looking for work ā¢ hiring at your company ā¢ have a friend who's doing either of those shoot me a DC š«”
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ā j4ck š„¶ icebreaker.xyz ā
@j4ck.eth
if you're looking for work, check out jobs.icebreaker.xyz if you're hiring, DC @esteez.eth to get added š«”
2 replies
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ā j4ck š„¶ icebreaker.xyz ā
@j4ck.eth
if you want feedback on your CV, have general hiring or job search questions, DC me š«” here to be a resource
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jp š©
@jpfraneto.eth
today i have my first technical interview ever. they added me to a telegram group with 4 other people, and they are extremely welcoming and i feel a good vibe. i have the meeting in 4 hours. what approach do you recommend me to have when going to it?
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Joshua Hyde ć
@jrh3k5.eth
moon is right: it's okay to not know, and demonstrate that you're able to close that knowledge gap. If given the option, choose the tools that you work with best - i.e., if you know JavaScript and are interviewing for a job that uses Go, use JavaScript - doing it in an environment in which you're unfamiliar will cause you to waste time trying to figure out how to do things in Go that you know how to do in JavaScript. You're there to show that you can write good code, not that you're a good Go programmer. Languages can be learned on the job (as I have done, multiple times).
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jp š©
@jpfraneto.eth
love this. im 5 minutes before the interview and imposter syndrome is kicking in like a beast
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Joshua Hyde ć
@jrh3k5.eth
Yeah, imposter syndrome never truly goes away (or maybe it does for other people, and I'm just a fraud and no one realizes it yet).
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