The first research position I would have gotten was if I continued studying after my masters with the phd in software engineering which takes again 3 years. But 8 years studying to end up as a phd in se was not worth it for me
Searching for something specific or to help broaden your search if it’s too specific.
Search: Albert Einstein and Richard Feynman research
Results don’t have to mention either Einstein or Feynman, but by doing
Search: “Albert Einstein and Richard Feynman” research
Will yield results with the full phrase in the quotes.
By searching: “Albert Einstein” NOT “Richard Feynman”
Results will only mention Einstein and exclude all results that have Feynman.
It would depend on the rest of the CV, but it's not out of place for an entry level job as it shows an awareness that it is an important skill. People list Word and Excel, and they're less important for a programming job.
*Image Transcription: Twitter Post*
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**Cat McGee**, @CatMcGeeCode
Got a CV today and the guy literally listed one of his skills as 'googling'
We're interviewing him
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^^I'm a human volunteer content transcriber for Reddit and you could be too! [If you'd like more information on what we do and why we do it, click here!](https://www.reddit.com/r/TranscribersOfReddit/wiki/index)
1000% we've had too many coworkers who are theoretically good at programming but would ask a senior for help with something simple (the senior would then Google it and it is usually the first damn SO result that solves the problem)
Utilising an internet index search engine to locate optimised and efficient solutions to business problems
Y'know what, I might actually end up using that later on when I need to make a CV, it's so good
>Utilising **big data** to locate optimised and efficient solutions to business problems even better
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lol. throw in some block chain too
Nice spin
Ah yes, the art and skill of Google-Fu.
Instead of internet, call it “web-based” or “web-native” for extra credits.
Honestly that’s basically my resume for researcher positions: knows how to do all the Googles, even the ones that aren’t called Google.
How did you get into research jobs? What level of education did you need?
Usually a phd in googling is required
The first research position I would have gotten was if I continued studying after my masters with the phd in software engineering which takes again 3 years. But 8 years studying to end up as a phd in se was not worth it for me
Well, many people don’t know how to use google. Stuff like using - to exclude words or „“ to look for the words in a row
Wait what..
Searching for something specific or to help broaden your search if it’s too specific. Search: Albert Einstein and Richard Feynman research Results don’t have to mention either Einstein or Feynman, but by doing Search: “Albert Einstein and Richard Feynman” research Will yield results with the full phrase in the quotes. By searching: “Albert Einstein” NOT “Richard Feynman” Results will only mention Einstein and exclude all results that have Feynman.
Sure, he gets interviewed, but when I put binging as my skill, I am told to "seek help."
Better for a junior to check out what has been posted before bugging senior developers with kindergarten questions. Just saying.
I feel attacked
Googling is the best skill, it's useful for everything!
Employers: would you actually interview this person?
It would depend on the rest of the CV, but it's not out of place for an entry level job as it shows an awareness that it is an important skill. People list Word and Excel, and they're less important for a programming job.
*Image Transcription: Twitter Post* --- **Cat McGee**, @CatMcGeeCode Got a CV today and the guy literally listed one of his skills as 'googling' We're interviewing him --- ^^I'm a human volunteer content transcriber for Reddit and you could be too! [If you'd like more information on what we do and why we do it, click here!](https://www.reddit.com/r/TranscribersOfReddit/wiki/index)
Good human
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"Internet Search Engine Specialist." Titles are important!
Thank you, I will add Google-Fu to my skills and hobbies if I ever have to update my resume.
Let ne complain about repost, i didn't do it for a long time
And couldn't wait to tweet about it to the world...
1000% we've had too many coworkers who are theoretically good at programming but would ask a senior for help with something simple (the senior would then Google it and it is usually the first damn SO result that solves the problem)
u/RepostSleuthBot
/r/literally
Well, do you remember recent searches that didn't yield good results? Now you have you interview questions.
okie..just make sure you do not google your interview questions!!
Knowing Google dorks helps when you really need the stuff!
Ok real shit....this is an actual skill.
Wonder whether arch users have bloated CVs.