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LeoNatan25 · 6 years ago
"I have experience doing Unit testing, E2E testing"

Is this what people search for these days? "I do tests" and everything else is a side point?

mattwad · 6 years ago
Based on my experience, it's a rare skill if they can do it well. The problem is everyone says "I do tests"
lmilcin · 6 years ago
I have been interviewing candidates regularly for over a decade. What the candidate says on his resume and the actual level of his skill is not at all correlated.

I have met many very good candidates that were obsessively worrying about gaps in their knowledge. At the same time poor candidates seem to be very confident thinking they are master developers but can't solve simplest task on a whiteboard.

LeoNatan25 · 6 years ago
Yes, sadly my experience is very similar. The more confident a candidate is, usually the poorer they are.
mattigames · 6 years ago
Yeah sorry, I was just trying to be succinct in the post, I been working on fixing some tests lately so I guess that's why it came to mind.
LeoNatan25 · 6 years ago
Good luck to you in your search!
lidHanteyk · 6 years ago
At scale, some companies do employ folks dedicated to producing tests, yes.
Der_Einzige · 6 years ago
Good! Companies which don't allow WFH for their employees in these circumstances should be punished for their greediness and incompetence.

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perl4ever · 6 years ago
State of NY still hasn't changed the rules for WFH for civil service.
tropo · 6 years ago
I think it goes the other way.

greediness: too cheap to provide an office

incompetence: letting employees assemble spy satellites at home

guessmyname · 6 years ago
According to these news [1][2][3] the first case of COVID-19 in Colombia was in a 19-year-old student who arrived in Bogota from Milan, Italy.

[1] https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-51772405

[2] http://www.china.org.cn/world/Off_the_Wire/2020-03/07/conten...

[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbl71sqE6NI

danielvlopes2 · 6 years ago
Many managers don't actually know how to handle WFH well. To help with the transition we decided to give away our eBook on the subject (which is usually paid). You can download the ePub/PDF here: https://knowyourteam.com/m/managing_remote_teams

Maybe share it internally and see if they change the policy. Getting a new job now might be tricky.

meddlepal · 6 years ago
What's the flu death rate vs Corona for over 70s? This feels like an overreaction.
icebraining · 6 years ago
Frankly, I'd switch due to the lack of respect for the employees alone. He's a software developer, what great harm can come from letting him WFH for a couple of weeks if that makes him feel safer?
pmlnr · 6 years ago
Its not just the death rate, it's the hospitalization ratio and the length of being out in bed.
DataWorker · 6 years ago
Correct. The death rate doesn’t really matter. What matters is no herd immunity, high r0 and the percent of cases that are severe. I’d also add that human error and the inexplicable need to not sound alarmist and to conform to peer pressure is another huge factor. Nobody wants to take responsibility.
ajross · 6 years ago
So... from the purely personal perspective of the author who quit: yes, realistically WFH isn't going to keep you alive. If it becomes a pandemic, eventually we're all going to get it. That's what pandemic means.

But straightforward management strategies like remote work still have value, because in a pandemic the problem just that everyone gets stick, it's that everyone gets sick at the same time. So... now you have to compare the mortality rate of a serious but normal flu infection when treated at a well-equipped hospital to the mortality rate of contracting COVID-19 in a city with effectively no hospital space available.

That's what we're trying to fix. And it's doable, but not if everyone (including, very frustratingly, our leaders) tries to pretend like nothing is wrong. If your office environment is plausibly exposed (and in the modern world of international geeks, almost all tech offices are), and you can WFH, you should WFH. Period.

perl4ever · 6 years ago
"If your office environment is plausibly exposed (and in the modern world of international geeks, almost all tech offices are), and you can WFH, you should WFH. Period."

I work for a government agency, and I asked my union rep about this, and was told, oh, if there are more cases, maybe they will do something then. You know, you live and die by the rules, and the rules say you can't WFH whenever you want, even though everybody has laptops, unlike when I worked in the private sector.

icebraining · 6 years ago
It's not just the office, it's the public transportation too. I'm generally a fan, but it's hard to argue it's not an extra factor of risk in these situations.

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SiFiPi · 6 years ago
As someone who has done lab testing for a local pharma producer, I definitely do not see this as an overreaction. This is a smart move, especially considering the ones they live at home with.
perl4ever · 6 years ago
I hate overly precise numbers - based on what I've read, my one sig. fig. estimate for people under 50 is 0.5% mortality for coronavirus and 0.05% for the flu.

So I do believe that coronavirus is ten times more lethal, but I am currently a lot more worried about the crazy things people do or may do in response. If I caught it, I would be mainly concerned about the social consequences, the quarantine, etc.

On the other hand, having everybody work from home that can, why not? I mean, there are so many things that would be far more unpleasant or desperate later on, and if it reduces the spread even a little, it seems logical to do.

In my workplace, they just put up posters on the bathroom doors saying wash your hands and stuff. Yes, there's one in every office,* but still...if everybody has a laptop, the person at the top needs to just say, everybody go home for the next month. They aren't going to do it until the hysteria reaches a tipping point though.

*and I don't mean one poster