On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 11:56 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: > I've interviewed hundreds of candidates over the years. > > I start with. > > "There is no pass or fail here, I'm going to start simple and if you know the > answers then I'll ask more difficult questions, if you don't know the answer > just say so. I don't know everything about .net and I don't expect you to > either" > > Then, subjects. > > Database > file reads writes > Serialization > Windows forms > Asp.net > > Differences between .net versions > Sql server. / oracle questions. > > Where do they look to solve problems. Team mates, google etc. > > And finish on. > > I'm at your home and I want a cup of coffee, explain all the steps of how to > make a cup of coffee.
Haha, wow, I would completely fail here. I must admit I have no technical understanding of the process of coffee making. I could explain the process of walking to the local cafe though. Cheers though Davy, but I'm mainly wondering if people are asking specific questions like "Tell me X and LINQ" or "Why is WCF better than MSMQ?" etc. > Key replys. > > Do they ask me if I want sugar, or do they provide it anyway. > > Do they go through all the steps. > > Do they check if the old filter is still in the machine. > > Etc. > > > Hth > Davy > > "When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail." I feel much > the same way about xml -- Noon Silk http://dnoondt.wordpress.com/ (Noon Silk) | http://www.mirios.com.au:8081 > "Every morning when I wake up, I experience an exquisite joy — the joy of being this signature."
