Resolume seeks an 'Experienced openGL Programmer'
category: offtopic [glöplog]
Quote:
What battle? Is it defined as a battle if one side slaughters the other without even showing up on D-day? ;)I get this funny feeling that people finally got fed up with windows vs linux battle
i'm more amused about the openFrameworks or Cinder optional requirement. that really says it all.
I'm seeking for a plumber with solid experience using wrenches. The applicant should have an accurate mental model of how things are laid out in my flat. A love for water is a plus.
I agree that using source code management is a basic requirement for a modern software developer. However, I do think that there is more to using Git than SVN (Mercurial being in the middle): Choosing files or chunks to commit is easy, but while you're mostly done with that in case of SVN, distributed version control introduced a bunch of new things to do, and many different to SVN and CVS (especially when it comes to Git). Dealing with remote repositories, cheap branches, commit squashing, rebase, or having different versions in a single "working copy" (actually the full repo) isn't something most devs grok instantly.
After all, I see an advantage in job ads pointing out what environment exists and applicants must be able to deal with. If the dev team is asked what a new colleague must know upfront (to avoid costly training periods), than familiarity with the team's toolchain will result in statements as "must know X and Y".
If as a result potential applicants see "Hey, they use SVN, [they suck!|but I want to work with a more modern tool!]" then one can avoid interviews with people wo don't want to work there anyway (either because high-targeting supercoder candidates want to use only the best tools as they know they make them more productive, and – likely rightfully – think that the company isn't as much into efficiency as it should be; or they are pseudo-rockstar morons for putting way too much value on a certain tool when a similar one would be at least sufficient, too).
After all, I see an advantage in job ads pointing out what environment exists and applicants must be able to deal with. If the dev team is asked what a new colleague must know upfront (to avoid costly training periods), than familiarity with the team's toolchain will result in statements as "must know X and Y".
If as a result potential applicants see "Hey, they use SVN, [they suck!|but I want to work with a more modern tool!]" then one can avoid interviews with people wo don't want to work there anyway (either because high-targeting supercoder candidates want to use only the best tools as they know they make them more productive, and – likely rightfully – think that the company isn't as much into efficiency as it should be; or they are pseudo-rockstar morons for putting way too much value on a certain tool when a similar one would be at least sufficient, too).
What language do they speak there? - I guess that's also an requirement...
gloom, yes - lots of vjs are bitches... especially when they do shows with shitty music.
but who you are to claim that tits projected on stage should be coded instead being just encoded?
but who you are to claim that tits projected on stage should be coded instead being just encoded?