Author

Topic: Bitcoin related Interview questions (Read 566 times)

member
Activity: 155
Merit: 15
September 14, 2017, 03:00:27 PM
#7
When recruiting I tend to look for intelligence (looking at a problem from more than one angle) and engineering mindset (leverage critical thinking to solve the problem) over a skillset (Guru level Solidity developer).

I'd appreciate hearing what you guys think are good interview questions to mine a good engineer from a group of applicants.

I agree the demos are best, but great questions are simply to ask what they have done in the past when faced with ___ . Ask a bunch of probing questions for follow up. Then ask them another scenario. Be sure to look for the patterns in the answers - it's never about one word, or one bad or good thought, it's about the patterns. Most people get hung up on the details, but it's about the patterns.
newbie
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
September 14, 2017, 01:59:10 PM
#6
When recruiting I tend to look for intelligence (looking at a problem from more than one angle) and engineering mindset (leverage critical thinking to solve the problem) over a skillset (Guru level Solidity developer).

I'd appreciate hearing what you guys think are good interview questions to mine a good engineer from a group of applicants.

It is obvious that you are looking for talent rather then knowledge. So don't ask them questions like the above, instead give them a problem to solve.
Just give them some small portion of work that you will want them to do or something related to it and see how they do.

Thanks aleksej996 - sometimes people feel companies are trying to get some "free consulting" by giving them a problem to solve, but I'll try to be clear of my intentions and see what they say!
sr. member
Activity: 490
Merit: 389
Do not trust the government
September 14, 2017, 07:17:40 AM
#5
When recruiting I tend to look for intelligence (looking at a problem from more than one angle) and engineering mindset (leverage critical thinking to solve the problem) over a skillset (Guru level Solidity developer).

I'd appreciate hearing what you guys think are good interview questions to mine a good engineer from a group of applicants.

It is obvious that you are looking for talent rather then knowledge. So don't ask them questions like the above, instead give them a problem to solve.
Just give them some small portion of work that you will want them to do or something related to it and see how they do.
legendary
Activity: 1260
Merit: 1046
September 14, 2017, 04:16:28 AM
#4
Ok, I'll be the genesis here...  Some theoretical questions I could ask are:
- What is cold storage and how does it work?
- Difference between POW and POS?
- From a technical standpoint, what's a smart contract, where is a smart contract, how does a smart contract work?
It is very beginner questions.
You can find all the answer very easely on the internet.

In few words.
 - cold storage : you disconnect from internet the system where yours privates keys are.
 - PoW : your return is dependant of the electricity you burn - PoS : your return is dependant of the number of coin you have
 - Samrt contract : the transaction is dependant of some external conditions
full member
Activity: 256
Merit: 102
September 14, 2017, 03:58:58 AM
#3
- How funds for DAO project was stolen?
- What is Turing complete language?
- What smart contracts can do, and what they can not?
newbie
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
September 13, 2017, 11:33:48 PM
#2
Ok, I'll be the genesis here...  Some theoretical questions I could ask are:
- What is cold storage and how does it work?
- Difference between POW and POS?
- From a technical standpoint, what's a smart contract, where is a smart contract, how does a smart contract work?
newbie
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
September 13, 2017, 11:12:42 PM
#1
When recruiting I tend to look for intelligence (looking at a problem from more than one angle) and engineering mindset (leverage critical thinking to solve the problem) over a skillset (Guru level Solidity developer).

I'd appreciate hearing what you guys think are good interview questions to mine a good engineer from a group of applicants.
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