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263 points mooreds | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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alphazard ◴[] No.45429963[source]
The biggest hiring hack for junior engineers is to hire the ones that have already been programming for a decade, and are called "junior" because they recently graduated university.

The junior/senior language is corporate-speak to equate everyone's value to "years of service" in industry or at a company. Obviously that's not how competency works, and if you are serious about hiring competent people, you should mostly ignore it. It's useful for listings, it is common terminology after all, but it's not semantically or descriptively useful.

replies(2): >>45430519 #>>45434082 #
1. never_inline ◴[] No.45434082[source]
This is a positive signal, but doesn't necessarily tell whether the person has intellectual capability to write "proper" code or just had some opportunity at the early age to be exposed to programming.

I have seen good and bad engineers who had been programming before graduation. Fortunately, good ones outnumber the bad ones.