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I have to say I wasn't at all surprised that most people said they were 100% honest.
Most programmers I know(myself included) have egos so big and are so bad at estimating anything that they have no need to 'lie'.
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Looking at the text responses... NOBODY has (yet) claimed to have invented CListCtrl!
Cheers,
विक्रम (Got my troika of CCCs!)
After all is said and done, much is said and little is done.
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Vikram A Punathambekar wrote: NOBODY has (yet) claimed to have invented CListCtrl!
I left it off my Resume too, along with Cobol!
_________________________
John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others."
Shhhhh.... I am not really here. I am a figment of your imagination.... I am still in my cave so this must be an illusion....
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Skill's are like our own assets.It will really fetch you alot.So don't lie about your skill's.Like if u know Jquery up to Some extent just say how much you know it?But never exaggerate about your skill's .
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Our job is such that lying about our skills is fundamentally pointless, because a single question on the subject will clear things out. As for lying about projects done etc. - well, it depends on whether you value your reputation. For example, if you are into consulting, any sort of misrepresentation will kill your reputation and thus your business.
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Dmitri Nesteruk wrote: because a single question on the subject will clear things out.
Unfortunately, a single question can also give someone the wrong impression. When I was interviewing last year, one of the questions dealt with threading and semaphores. Now, for the majority of work that I do, I don't really have to think about threading, and if I do, I'm not worried about mutexes, semaphores, blocking, etc., unless there's some cross-thread communication required, which I try to avoid. And besides, when I know I need a mutex, I look up the various options and figure out which one I need. So this information is not in my head where I can just spew out the various options and nuances of each.
And ironically, just about every phone interview question I was asked had no applicability to the actual job. I hate interviews, especially phone interviews. If I ever have to interview again, I am going to refuse doing a phone interview, even if it means missing out on 90% of the "opportunities" out there.
Marc
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For a new graduate from school, a little exaggeration is acceptable. He might be able to do a lot of things just by the experience accumulated through the assignments in programming courses, but he never worked on a "true" project.
TOMZ_KV
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Some of my friends, In their CV in Skills & Projects section, they put new version instead of actual version they have worked.
Example (VS 2010 instead of VS 2008, SQL Server 2008 instead of SQL Server 2005, C# 3.5 instead of C# 2.0)
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thatraja wrote: SQL Server 2008 instead of SQL Server 2008
Yeah, one is much better than the other.
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oh...i forgot to change that 2008 to 2005
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you're not alone. I forgot to change vs2010 to vs2005 too.
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True fact......But when they receive mails like "Need .NET Developer with 3.5 framework", they don't want miss that one (actually they worked in lower version). So they just replace the versions in CV. That's it.
In some interviews, HR asked about Linq, etc.,(which not exists in lower version), they can't able to answer that.
But after couple of interviews, finally some of them got a job
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Higer version may not be benefitial if a company is on SQL server 2000.
TOMZ_KV
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Your fact is right, but in that company they are asking most of questions from higher versions in their interviews(Also in the case of migration to higher version).
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I only thought of it after finding out someone who left here added significant weight to his resume.... one of the applied to locations called.... I was speechless (which is an achievement).
_________________________
John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others."
Shhhhh.... I am not really here. I am a figment of your imagination.... I am still in my cave so this must be an illusion....
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The sad thing is, you can't reply to such calls honestly. Most corporate legal departments would throw their hands up in horror if you spoke with a former employee's prospective employer. There have been far too many successful litigations based upon such statements.
Software Zen: delete this;
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"I can confirm that John Doe worked at My Company from Start Date to End Date. Beyond that I have no comment."
You've said exactly nothing critical that Mr Doe could make an issue of, but the fact that he wasn't able to find references who praised him to the sky will be immediately obvious to the HR drone calling you and allow him/her to draw the correct conclusion.
3x12=36
2x12=24
1x12=12
0x12=18
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which was about how the conversation went... with a lot of silence before the response which spoke volumes more.
_________________________
John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others."
Shhhhh.... I am not really here. I am a figment of your imagination.... I am still in my cave so this must be an illusion....
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Marc
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Me neither. But do we need a reason for everything?
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In fact, when I list all the technologies I ever worked with, I get calls about positions I am not really interested in, such as Java and ASP.NET. Therefore, I made my latest resume (from 2007) free from keywords like Java, .NET, MFC, even if I do have experience with all these technologies. Worked fine in my case
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It happened to me many times...
Cust: "Ohhh.. there is a project to add features to a system made in VB6 (or even Cobol)"
PM: Mmm... this guy! he knows VB6 (or whatever)...
Result: Many months working in Windows 2000 patching a very very old app.
Feeling going back to the 1970s, think about the "vi" editor (i hate it!).
...dreaming about objects, generics, lambdas and linq!
Wake up! The Singularity is coming.
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I try not to let people know I can do fortran (ouch). They still find out. Now my boss has put me down for a project in Ada. I am not keen on this. But someone has to do it I suppose.
------------------<;,><-------------------
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