Oct. 30th, 2007

purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (agents)
Google are trying to recruit me again. I say "again" because they tried to recruit me earlier this year but then changed their minds after the second interview - which involved lots of technical stuff about Unix shell scripting and java programming. I can't quite decide what to make of this (apart from the fact that having the words "semantic web" on your web page seems to attact Google like wasps to honey). I sent a polite email back suggesting they check their records and get back to me and they responded almost immediately with a "useful to know we've interviewed you before - please go through the process again".

Problem is, my skill set is not really any different now to how it was 6 months ago and the interview process, always assuming they were actually interested in how well I knew my way around the more esoteric details of Unix and Java, seemed perfectly fair to me - I certainly didn't end up feeling I hadn't had an adequate chance to demonstrate my knowledge of the subject or my ability to solve problems on the fly. Given that we are talking a job in Dublin or Zurich and, although I enjoyed the actual interviews, I didn't much enjoy the sitting by the phone waiting for the interview to start (not to mention the fact that they failed to call on the right day once) and I found them quite draining, I'm kind of umming and ahhing about this. Preparing a non-academic CV is quite a lot of work since I have to rethink my whole approach to CVs (I've observed that businesses tend to expect your CV to fit into two pages and so forth) and the last one I sent was one of the few things that I irretrievably lost when my hard drive went phoom last winter. Google sounds like a really good place to work but going through the application process again seems like quite a lot of effort for a job which, on past experience, I probably won't get and which, due to location, I might not be able to accept even if I did get it,
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (books)
I was interested to note in [livejournal.com profile] wellinghall's recent post about popular libary books that Fleshmarket Close by Iain Rankin was in the top ten and was, in fact, the only Rankin book to appear in the top ten. Does that mean people think it is the best Rankin? or just that its reached some optimal point past publication that suddenly everyone starts borrowing it from the library?

what I thought about Fleshmarket Close )

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