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      Lineup Systems

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      Entretien pour Senior Software Engineer

      20 août 2020
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via un recruteur. J'ai passé un entretien chez Lineup Systems

      Entretien

      I have never been so excited about an interview before, and I've been through quite a few lately. The idea of working for an international company excites me quite a bit for a multitude of reasons. Unfortunately, this one went exactly the opposite of how I had hoped. Let's start with the fact that I was never given a job description, and never told any details about what we'd be doing in the interview, especially having to have certain tools for remote connection. The recruiter wasn't aware it was to be a full 2-hour interview. I was just told they want someone who has C#, .Net Core and SQL, and nice to have Blazor experience. Also told some other basics about the flexibility they needed in the person they were looking for, such as the ability to line up with Czech time for the first few weeks, or even travel there. Cool with me since I love Czechia and even speak a little bit of Czech. I had a really great conversation with both Michael, the CEO, and Jikra, who seems to be Michael's right-hand man when it comes to development. We had a great time until it came to the point where I was to do some SQL queries for them over a remote connection. I wasn't made aware this would be a thing, but no big deal. I know SQL well. So I remote into their machine and start writing some queries. Looking at their temporary database, it was really strange. Their schema was littered with column and table names with underscores. I stopped using underscores 20 years ago in field names, as it doesn't fit any naming conventions in coding with C#, Javascript, PHP, C, or any other language I've ever used, especially when designing a database using a code-first technique. Even Microsoft recommends never using underscores in column or table names because pascal and camel casing makes them unnecessary. They are to be used in index and foreign key names to separate table names from column names. The connection is very slow since the remote computer is in Czechia. It's on a mac so literally NONE of the shortcuts for cursor movement would work. Shift, ctrl, alt, home, end, etc. It's not SQL Server Management Studio or Visual Studio so everything is strange. I start typing and immediately I'm being critiqued on my typing. "You've got a typo". "Do you know how to touch-type?" "No, that's wrong". I feel my heart racing. I'm sweating. Every keystroke becomes embarrassing because I'm doing it wrong. This program matches parentheses in a strange way, so some of my pre-typed ones are disappearing, unlike SSMS, causing me to have to re-read every little bit and see why I was missing some parentheses. The connection was agonizingly slow, meaning I'd type several characters, and it'd be 2-3 seconds before they'd show up. Backspacing took time. Had to use the mouse to select text. Couldn't even copy/paste with ctrl+c and ctrl+v. Using their browser for looking stuff up made things worse. I suddenly felt like looking at stackoverflow made me a bad developer, despite that being the life of a developer. I complete the first one, and am given another and another. I couldn't complete the last one despite getting very close. I really wish I could have done them locally in order to move more quickly and change something small, run the query, examine the result, then make changes. "Now you're just overcomplicating it", he says as I'm typing, which I already knew. It ended with "ok, I've seen enough", and that was basically the end of the interview. No opportunity to ask any additional questions. That was just the end. I don't remember a time when I was made to feel like such a moron. I really don't think they were trying to make me feel stupid on purpose. It was just lack of understanding what I was seeing from my end, and questions about a poorly designed database schema I've never seen before. I've never been so embarrassed in my 42 years of life. I sent a thank you email afterwards, despite how I was feeling. Never heard back from them. Not even from the recruiter. Essentially I've been ghosted, which I find rather unprofessional.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Ability to work czech hours
      2 réponse(s)
      1