[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

At my current and previous job (IT) we do 3 rounds, team (most important), technical and management. I find that this works pretty well to hire people that really dit both the team and know how to do the job. Each last 40-60 minutes.

The first is where most candidates fail, it's an interview with your future peers with little technical content. Mainly talking about interests, work style, how you interact with team mates, etc.

The second is with senior team members and is mostly technical.

The third is management rubber stamping the teams choice and you have to fuck up pretty badly to fail.

I should add that we hire many candidates from abroad, and having people fail probation after moving their families across the globe would be a really shitty move.

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

I saw the scene on Reddit many years ago and thought it was hilarious, so it stuck.

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

There are plenty of options to 'put down' a human as well, but most of those require medical expertise to administer.

Medical personnel generally frown upon the whole idea of putting people down, so they're not really an option

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago

In Manjaro you just run this command, there's a GU package manager as well, but I've never used it. Pamac takes care of downloading / building any required dependencies and the AUR repo includes any required patches for the application run well on Arch / Manjaro.

pamac build

I haven't used Arch in years, but I believe it was something similar.

The whole system is pretty similar to, (but more refined than) FreeBSDs Ports tree.

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

I went from Windows XP -> FreeBSD -> Debian -> several Ubuntu flavors -> MacOS -> Manjaro on my desktop. I ended up switching to MacOs after countless upgrade and graphics card issues in the early 2010s but switched back to Linux again after getting tired of Apples more and more restrictive environment.

For servers I've switched around between FreeBSD, Debian and Ubuntu at home and various Redhat based distros at work.

Right now I use Ubuntu because it just works for my Kubernetes home cluster and Redhat at work because its well supported for commercial software.

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago

For me, AURs main advantage is the huge library of software available. No mess resolving dependencies like when manually building from source and no issues with 3rd party repos breaking each others dependencies like in PPA

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 12 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

My ass hits the asphalt at 120km/h, not entirely sure I will still be capable of pooping from there after that.

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 23 points 7 months ago

Sshhh, let's all pretend we didn't see this, they'll never know!

[-] I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world 25 points 10 months ago

Good news, it applies to all battery operated devices, not just phones

I_poop_from_there

joined 11 months ago