RE: [GD-General] what you look for in a coder...
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From: Nick T. <ni...@ro...> - 2004-06-08 18:24:24
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> scott > On Mon, Jun 07, 2004 at 02:57:46PM -0700, Nick Trout wrote: > > > > * An interest in Star Trek. Must at least know Jim's middle name. > > > I don't even know Jim's first name! And besides, don't you want at > least one member on your team who can introduce you to girls? Or protect > you from the wallet inspectors? ;) It's Tiberius! (I had to look it up - the shame). http://www.starfleetlibrary.com/bios/james_t_kirk.htm I have noticed an unusual interest in Star Trek amongst programmers, well, actually developers, in the past. I attribute this (jokingly), and the seemingly lacking personality skills of _some_ developers to borderline autism. However, that's not always a detrimental comment! See this: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3380569.stm Autism is much higher in men than women. The following link is interesting: <quote> "Are there essential differences between the male and female brain? My theory is that the female brain is predominantly hard-wired for empathy, and that the male brain is predominantly hard-wired for understanding and building systems. I call it the empathising-systemising (E-S) theory." [...] "Is there an explanation for autism?=20 I argue that people with autism may have an extreme of the male brain - good at systemising, very bad at empathising - and that studying autism with E-S theory in mind, can help increase our understanding of the condition. Two largest sub-groups of autism are classic autism, and Asperger syndrome. Both share certain features: a difficulty in developing social relationships; a difficulty in communication; the presence of unusually strong, narrow interests; and a strong adherence to routines." </quote> See "They just can't help it": http://www.aetheronline.com/mario/Eye-Openers/women_vs_men.htm and there is a test: :-) http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/news/page/0,12983,937443,00.html I'm merely making an observation here. I don't think this is unique to the games industry either. I'm just pointing out a personality type that some of us may recognise. Hell, we might even recognise these traits in ourselves. > CAVEY GERARD > >I'd say that's a result of working with bad programmers. > > Someone here spoke about the stress during an interview : > do you think it is really important , do you think the social aspect of > the > coder is really important ?Will you deny a good engineer because he doesnt > talk so much ... I know I've messed up interviews and exams in the past because of nerves. Exams are unfortunate because you don't get a second chance. If you're unsure you should give someone a second interview, at least phone them up. I would definitely hire someone who was quiet but answered all my questions. We have some great, diligent programmers who hardly say a word, but listen and contribute. It takes all sorts to make a world. Nick |