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  • Indiana.

  • What was a TC for, like snap uber like Google?

  • Yeah, So that depends on how you calculated, but basically around through okay for snapping uber and then for Google about like 240 day.

  • That's the reason before we continue this video, I just want to say Thank you So much for Blink is for sponsoring this video.

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  • All right.

  • Thanks for coming, Cyrus.

  • Do you want to say your name first?

  • Sure.

  • Uh, way.

  • All right.

  • Thank you for coming, Cyrus.

  • And, um yes.

  • So let's just have, like, a casual conversation because you know I'm not try hard anymore, so we can just say yes, your name.

  • What do you do?

  • And then just so that you could get some contacts.

  • Sure.

  • I'm sorry.

  • She I just recently joined uber Um, yes, I met on that job at Facebook.

  • We're on the same team in July, 2017 on.

  • And then I was there for about a year and 1/2 on Gwen through interview Prep cycle.

  • So nice.

  • So wait.

  • So what college did you go?

  • Toe?

  • I went to a small rewards college in Kentucky at about 40 100 students.

  • Got Centre College in 1400 suit as pretty 100 students.

  • Total weight, the total Totally like 54 years.

  • Four years?

  • That's crazy.

  • And what would his liberal arts college, if you don't know eso?

  • Basically, they try to emphasize like a general education.

  • So trying to, like, produce well rounded students.

  • Eso.

  • When I was there, I wrote a lot of papers.

  • I was really a philosophy major, so I switched to computer Science Junior year.

  • So it's a bit late.

  • CFC.

  • Okay, So the reason why I brought you here is because you have a very famous post on C s career questions right on Reddit.

  • So, yes, I'm gonna put that in the description, but can you kind of tell me like what that poses about?

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • So basically, I spent a lot of time reading the subreddit before I joined Facebook on, and I saw a lot of posts talking about people joining Facebook, Google, big tech companies.

  • And a lot of them had, you know, pretty impressive backgrounds from Stanford.

  • You know, you Waterloo, Stanford of Canada.

  • But, you know, I came from a smaller birds college.

  • I didn't really know anybody got any of those companies.

  • And so when I did, Evan should make it out there.

  • I thought I could give back and talk about how medo.

  • Okay, so you did have a C s degree, but it's from like a ship called Dr Pretty Much.

  • But then and then when you came out, you got what you got a job, but like, yeah, yes, I graduated the beating of 2015 and I joined, like a big financial company still in the south on then.

  • Then I joined a startup, And then throughout this time, I had been getting like interview calls for, like, Amazon myself, ghoul.

  • But I just didn't really focus on studying and didn't want to do well on.

  • Then finally, I got another call from Facebook and I decided that, you know, this is the moment you try hard.

  • Yes.

  • Want to try hard mode?

  • I went all in and I studied, like, 120 hours in, like, a month working for time.

  • Um, it's really grinded and just wrote a post about experience.

  • That's perfect, because I just quit my job, You know it.

  • But my audience doesn't know.

  • I just quit my job as a data scientist and now I want to go back into sweet, you know?

  • So I've already prepared and interview a lot, but I want to hear, like, your cheek holiday juice start like, OK, I don't know.

  • You have your full time job.

  • Still, you quit or no, you just study on the side.

  • Yeah, I think ideally, you don't quit because it's, you know, it's really risky, but it does depend.

  • I have a friend who successfully quit her job studying four.

  • Time on.

  • She was actually you know, Austin, North Carolina.

  • Um, made it out to s so called that way.

  • But so I think the benefit of quitting is that it's kind of like you get, like, forcing function.

  • You get that desperation.

  • But obviously it's a big gamble.

  • It doesn't work out.

  • You kind of screwed be Ideally, you keep your job and you study on the side.

  • So you said you're inside yesterday on the side book times.

  • So you just went back, Coleman and start studying.

  • Uh, yeah.

  • So not yeah, pretty much every day, I guess.

  • But basically, yeah, I came up with, like, a study plan and a schedule through about timeline on.

  • And then one thing s I just recently another post.

  • But one thing I talk about is that I think it really helps to have, like, a quantifiable goes Just because it's so easy.

  • Become frustrated in the beginning.

  • And it's hard to tell, like even making progress.

  • And so my goal is where to study, you know, like, 100 hours and do like 100 coding problems, including problems.

  • Okay.

  • And what did you use for these?

  • Quoting problems.

  • Yes, I mainly easily code So lee codes really trendy right now, but I think you get a premium for it.

  • Yeah, I think it's worth it.

  • Just the return investment, but yeah.

  • So I did a lot of the code I think is the most efficient way of studying.

  • So before Facebook, you diddly code.

  • I did?

  • Yeah, I did some for Did some for Facebook?

  • I did.

  • I think I did about, like, 76 problems.

  • Then this time around, I did like 100 30.

  • Hard mediums are easy, mostly mediums.

  • The medium is the best bang for your book.

  • Easy's, um you can strike with their love really fast, but you don't really like struggle that much, so you don't get experience.

  • And their hearts are like, you struggle too much because they don't cover as much ground.

  • Okay, but your job at Facebook was as a data engineer.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • Okay.

  • What do you do now?

  • Eso now must offer engineer.

  • So actually, I guess similar to you.

  • I wanted to transfer back to being a software engineer by Yeah, I didn't really find a transition too hard, I think interviewing They mostly want to see if, like if if you can code and you can show that through the Cockney interview.

  • They already care.

  • Okay, so?

  • So they'd engineer.

  • They still ask you, like code stuff.

  • Like I'll go to them since.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay, So you did about 70 something questions.

  • And was that like, an overkill for Facebook?

  • Or was it?

  • Yeah.

  • So for Facebook, it was a little bit overkill, because that was the date engineering position.

  • But this time around, for, like, uber and Google, it was about the right amount.

  • So your goal was 100 hours, like total?

  • Don't know until you started interview.

  • Yes, I ended up doing about 120 but I think wafer before Facebook Not sorry.

  • Before Facebook, it was a remember, yes, our before video here before Facebook.

  • It was, I guess, like 100 to get over 120 or something like that.

  • Um, but yeah, I tracked my time.

  • Just because I feel like, um if you only track problems, then you're, like, incentivized to like, only too easy problems in a way.

  • Like subconsciously.

  • And they've only track time.

  • It's kind of like you, you incentivize be inefficient.

  • I spent a lot of time for problems like it doesn't really matter.

Indiana.

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A2 初級

GPAが2.9の人は、今ではSWE(ソフトウェアエンジニア)として30万ドルを稼いでいます。 (Guy with 2.9 GPA now makes $300k as a SWE (Software Engineer))

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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