I’m a software engineer who sometimes interviews other software engineers. I’m not given a script to go off of, I get to ask them whatever I want. Usually we just talk about technology and coding from a high level. I’m not a big fan of whiteboard tests.

I’ve noticed, however, that a lot of people applying to software engineering jobs feel very alien to me. I started coding when I was 12 and spent most of my teenage years on technology forums. A lot of people applying to these positions are very much ladder-climbing type people who got into the career for the money. Working with these people is an absolute drag.

We also interview for “culture fit”. I would like to add in a single question to my interviews to assess that: what is your favorite science fiction book. You don’t even have to have read it recently, you just have to have read one and formed an opinion on it. My thoughts

Pros:

  • Weeds out a lot of people since half of Americans don’t read books at all.
  • Theoretically filters out people who love this kind of tech subculture from people who are just in it for the money

Cons:

  • It’s unfair to people who enjoy fantasy novels, or any other form of fiction
  • Being motivated by money probably shouldn’t be a disqualifying factor (I certainly wouldn’t do this job for free), I’m just tired of working with yuppies and lashing out at poor unsuspecting Jr Devs

I’m half-hearted on this. I see why it could be considered unfair but I’m really tired of the kinds of people I work with.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    18 hours ago

    I never got super into sci-fi; it just wasn’t my cuppa. I was always on the fantasy side of things with regard to fiction, being heavily into D&D and many of the novels around the various settings and characters. Edit: I’ve been a developer since the mid aughts and alternately worked in tech and other jobs before that. I wrote my first programs in basic around 9 or 10 when dad gave me something to do to keep out of his hair.

    • Curiousfur@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic” -Arthur C. Clarke

      Always loved this one as a sci-fi and fantasy kid. When you love dragons and teleportation and talking animals, it kinda doesn’t matter how they are delivered to your brain.

      • nycki@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        I like to say that Star Wars is to fantasy what Discworld is to sci-fi. Star wars is swords and sorcery in space, and Discworld is ethics and robotics in middle earth.

        • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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          11 hours ago

          Discworld is ethics and robotics in middle earth.

          You just blew my mind, a little. Dang. That’s Apt.

          clacks header

          GNU Terry Pratchett.

    • Pronell@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      A buddy of mine was interviewing for a job and got it in part because he was a player in one of my games. They knew they could get along with him.