02-13-2000 11:25 AM
03-25-2002 02:52 PM
07-12-2016 07:52 PM
HI
I am hadi and I have more than 10 years experiance in labview programming.
I am interssted for that job.
My email is hadiakbariha@gmail.com
thanks
hadi
07-12-2016 08:06 PM
07-12-2016 10:39 PM - edited 07-12-2016 10:41 PM
You replied to a 14 16 years old post, unless you have a time machine there is little chance to catch that job 😉
07-14-2016 08:55 AM
Yes not capitalizing your name, let alone LabVIEW properly after having so much experience, not to mention the spelling mistakes, and putting personal contact information in your post, doesn't bode well either. If you can't be bothered to following Internet edicate, you probably aren't going to check how long ago the post was made either.
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17 Part Blog on Automotive CAN bus. - Hooovahh - LabVIEW Overlord
07-14-2016 09:27 AM
//beginrant
Hooovahh brings up a point of contention for me. At my previous company (extremely large, $5B gross income, commercial avionics), I was the technical lead and ultimate decision maker for candidates applying for software test engineering. I IMMEDIATELY disqualified people who didn't properly spell LabVIEW or TestStand on their resume.
You'd be surprised how many people don't put an ounce of effort in a resume, speaks volumes regarding their work ethic.
//endrant
07-21-2016 02:01 AM
@ChrisK88 wrote:
(...)IMMEDIATELY disqualified people who didn't properly spell LabVIEW or TestStand on their resume.
(...)
Competent programming is an excercise in intelligence, attention to detail and rigor. Indeed my own experience also tells me that sloppy and simplistic reading and writing proficiency generally signals a lack of those traits and instead reeks of a banal mind, opportunism and arrogance. Indeed an irritating mindset to deal with for people that strive for excellence.
07-22-2016 01:27 AM
@User002 wrote:
@ChrisK88 wrote:(...)IMMEDIATELY disqualified people who didn't properly spell LabVIEW or TestStand on their resume.
(...)
Competent programming is an excercise in intelligence, attention to detail and rigor. Indeed my own experience also tells me that sloppy and simplistic reading and writing proficiency generally signals a lack of those traits and instead reeks of a banal mind, opportunism and arrogance. Indeed an irritating mindset to deal with for people that strive for excellence.
Pretty sure Ben would disagree with you on that. LabVIEW is a godsend for people with dyslexia.
07-22-2016 01:44 AM
@Intaris wrote:
@User002 wrote:
@ChrisK88 wrote:(...)IMMEDIATELY disqualified people who didn't properly spell LabVIEW or TestStand on their resume.
(...)
Competent programming is an excercise in intelligence, attention to detail and rigor. Indeed my own experience also tells me that sloppy and simplistic reading and writing proficiency generally signals a lack of those traits and instead reeks of a banal mind, opportunism and arrogance. Indeed an irritating mindset to deal with for people that strive for excellence.
Pretty sure Ben would disagree with you on that. LabVIEW is a godsend for people with dyslexia.
Obviously dyslexia does not mean someone is missing discipline, ability to focus or having a good style (in programming, etc.). But if someone without any such writing/reading disfunctionality shows bad writing/reading skills, it indicates problems indeed. But I think it is also connected to overall education level: someone with better educational background will show better writing skills. Hmm, however the future generation might change this: they will not be able to write or read properly, but how to use a tablet 😄