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Google X Worked An Older Employee Until He Was Hospitalized, Then Laid Him Off (thenextweb.com)

Julie188 writes: When Google shows up to buy your startup and trade out your relatively worthless startup stock for Google stock, and offers you a high paying job, too, it seems like a dream come true. But for a group of ex-military guys at a startup called Titan Aerospace, it was more like a nightmare, according to a detailed article from Business Insider. After Google buys their company, it shuts it down, gets them to move across the country to California and then sets them up working long hours outdoors in 100-degree heat. One older guy, in his mid-50s, was even hospitalized, and when he returned to work, he was essentially pushed out. Some people claimed it was bias against older workers and veterans.

283 comments

  1. They've done that where I work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    We're self-insured, and they didn't want to pay the hospital bills.

    1. Re:They've done that where I work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are spending most of waking life in an environment where the people are willing to throw each other to the wolves. Get the hell out. If you hate all your workmates then what are you doing there? If you only minorly dislike them then imagine they get cancer and die leaving their families bereft. Just think of the extra risk of someone "going postal". You will find that, just in the likely reduced healthcare costs through reduction in stress (not to mention insurance) it's probably worth your while to take a 25-50% pay cut just to leave.

      CAPTCHA: emigrate - Slashdot knows the truth.

  2. ...it seems like a dream come true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was more like a nightmare.
    I am 8 and I wrote this.

    1. Re:...it seems like a dream come true. by computational+super · · Score: 1

      You didn't write it, you plagiarized it.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
  3. uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah that will get you a lawsuit and probably a loss.

    "That HR person was so inadequate in handling the case. Her job is to protect management the whole time."
    Again for anyone thinking otherwise HR is not there for you.

    What happened here is not new and will happen again and again. These 'new' companies are making the exact same mistakes as the previous ones. That paperwork is because of messups like this.

    1. Re:uh yeah... by Seranfall · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah that will get you a lawsuit and probably a loss.

      "That HR person was so inadequate in handling the case. Her job is to protect management the whole time." Again for anyone thinking otherwise HR is not there for you.

      What happened here is not new and will happen again and again. These 'new' companies are making the exact same mistakes as the previous ones. That paperwork is because of messups like this.

      Exactly! HR is typically there to protect the company. While it is often in their best interest to protect employees (i.e avoiding lawsuits) that really is secondary and when there is a conflict it's the employee that will lose.

    2. Re:uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call HR "lawsuit avoidance".

    3. Re:uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Setting the minimum salary for exempt employees to $500,000 a year would go a long way towards fixing this. Everyone below $500,000 would be paid by the hour with paid overtime.

      It's easier for companies to hire a new person than it is to let an existing one retrain for a new position. Cheaper and it gives the company an excuse to systematically let go a group of employees costing Z per year and replace them with a group making 10% less than Z.

      Spread out over a multinational where it's 'normal attrition' is called portfolio management.

    4. Re: uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where I work they took the human out of human resources.

    5. Re:uh yeah... by lucm · · Score: 1

      HR is typically there to protect the company. While it is often in their best interest to protect employees (i.e avoiding lawsuits) that really is secondary and when there is a conflict it's the employee that will lose.

      HR people are often stuck in the middle. Senior management says they're protecting incompetent workers, workers say they're doing the dirty work of senior management. It's even worse in unionized environments.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    6. Re: uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's really "Human[s are] Resources"

    7. Re:uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you have a problem with your boss, HR's job is to get rid of you before your boss does something actionable.

    8. Re:uh yeah... by war4peace · · Score: 1

      No they are not. They, like everyone else, are paid through people above them.
      In certain countries (e.g. France, Germany) incompetent workers are very well protected by laws while Upper Management's dirty work isn't. That's where HR comes in, to minimize the former (protection) and maximize the latter (dirty work).
      HR almost always manages up. Sometimes they appear to be protecting the employee, but in fact they're protecting their own asses. For example, when many employees from my group provided bad feedback for a certain Director during a yearly review phase, HR contacted most of them (save for two) and "privately" told them that it would be best to adjust hat feedback because the "anonymous" data isn't that "anonymous" after all. One of the two employees who were not notified caught wind of this and promptly changed his feedback, the other wasn't so lucky and was laid off shortly afterwards, ostensibly for reasons different than "you provided bad feedback about that Director".

      HR is like Nobel's dynamite: created for noble reasons, used for all the nefarious ones.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    9. Re:uh yeah... by mysidia · · Score: 1

      It's easier for companies to hire a new person than it is to let an existing one retrain for a new position.

      What the government should do is make a rule that any physical labor or work under adverse conditions such as temperatures outside the normal range of human comfort for more than 2 hours per day voids the exempt employee status, And even for exempt employees the "fixed" or "salary" amount is for no more than 40 hours average work per week over the course of a year. Companies Must meter the actual number of hours for reporting purposes when the employee is working or required to be at a work location using common automated methods. If the median number of hours per week worked for any sequential or non-sequential 2-months out of 12 months exceeds 40, or the average number of hours worked per week exceeds 40 for any 2-months out of 12 months, Then the employee can no longer be considered exempt, and the employee must be compensated at their standard salary Plus additional renumeration for all time above 40 hours at the average per-hourly rate of salary times 1.5 for office work, and times 2 for physical labor or labor under adverse environmental or hazardous conditions; If the worker is put out of commission or suffers a health problem requiring treatment due to working conditions, then Employer should be required to pay not only out of pocket expenses for treatment of the problem, But also for lost wages due to time worker is out of commission, And laying them off or dismissing them based on productivity or their physical limitations should be barred/prohibited, if they were a salaried or exempt employee.

    10. Re:uh yeah... by scdeimos · · Score: 1

      No kidding. If HR was there to protect the employees it would be called Human Treasures.

    11. Re:uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      HR at my company told me when I started asking about going back to school to get a masters "You know, you really shouldn't be bothered, you won't get a pay raise". My company has a fairly flat structure and as such I was friends with the director I worked under at the time. He told me the same HR lady was arguing we had too much paid time off and it should be reduced. This director was really good and did a lot to make life good for employees. He left a few years later, I'm still friends with him. He doesn't admit it, but I think he was forced out.

    12. Re:uh yeah... by stabiesoft · · Score: 2

      This is merica where we now believe freezing to death is not a reason to abandon your post. Thanks Neil Gorsuch. /sarcasm

    13. Re:uh yeah... by ronaldbeal · · Score: 5, Informative

      As Gorsuch said in his dissent: "And there’s simply no law anyone has pointed us to giving employees the right to operate their vehicles in ways their employers forbid. Maybe the Department would like such a law, maybe someday Congress will adorn our federal statute books with such a law. But it isn’t there yet. And it isn’t our job to write one — or to allow the Department to write one in Congress’s place." He is being lambasted for not being compassionate, but compassion is not the job of the court. The job of the court is to interpret what the law says, not what it SHOULD say. Full ruling here: https://www.ca10.uscourts.gov/...

    14. Re:uh yeah... by stabiesoft · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Then clearly you believe the 50 year old in the article should be allowed to die. Good luck with that when your boss asks you to die for your job. Oh and the law also says that a contract that would result in your death is null and void. The law is much like the bible, you can find something to back your position.

    15. Re:uh yeah... by ronaldbeal · · Score: 0

      Clearly, you fail to comprehend the difference between what is right, and what is law. TransAm Trucking morally shouldn't have fired the driver for violating their rules, and should have allowed an exception for the unusual circumstances, that would have been right. But not doing so, while morally corrupt, was not illegal. During the infancy of this country slavery was legal. That did not make it moral or right. Eventually The Constitution was amended to rectify that wrong. Correct the wrongs the proper way. Get state and federal legislators to pass a law that protects employees from being fired if they do things that are necessary to protect their life. A parallel. In many states, it is legal for a person with CHP/HCP to carry a handgun on their person. Many businesses have a policy of not allowing that at work. Every year, dozens of people are fired for defending their life with a legally carried handgun, because the carrying was in contravention to company policy. Typically happens with convenience store workers, pizza delivery people, and Uber drivers. Numerous legal precedence of firing someone for defending their own life.

    16. Re:uh yeah... by Rob+Y. · · Score: 3, Insightful

      At least part of the Court's job is to determine whether a badly written law, interpreted literally, infringes on the individuals rights to the point that that infringement is unconstitutional. But Gorsuch types are loath to step up to the plate in such cases - unless said individual is a corporation...

      --
      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    17. Re:uh yeah... by stabiesoft · · Score: 1

      You make my point. In some states it is both legal and illegal for the CHP/HCP to carry a gun. So which is it?

    18. Re:uh yeah... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      HR women are the most evil people you will ever meet.

    19. Re:uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously? Go fuck yourself. Any law that allows an employer to put ANYONE--employees, customer, the public at large--in a life threatening situation is utter bullshit. Exercise some compassion, you piece of shit.

    20. Re:uh yeah... by lucm · · Score: 1

      HR women are the most evil people you will ever meet.

      I think one of the reasons HR people suck is because anyone can do their job so they assume everyone's job is easy.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    21. Re: uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh really, in which states is it legal AND illegal? How exactly did he make your point.

      Just trying to get some clarity here.

    22. Re: uh yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Listen, you cock twiddling doofus.

      This isn't about compassion, you fucktard of a brainless pony boy. It's about the law. I know that can be hard to understand, so idiot knob lickers like yourself burst into insta tears... but you need to work on comprehending the difference between morality and law.

      Law cannot and should not legislate every moral issue. That said, something can be wrong and not be illegal. Until such a time as society deems it illegal, it doesn't matter if it's compassionate or not, it's not fucking illegal.

      So, work that 2 gram noodle of yours to exhaustion and try to fucking place the concept of legality firmly between your twatted up cross eyes. It's not hard. Now stop crying and try to do something valuable with yourself for once.

    23. Re:uh yeah... by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Every year, dozens of people are fired for defending their life with a legally carried handgun, because the carrying was in contravention to company policy.

      9 times out of 10, they are "defending" property.

      If Gorsach's ruling was legit, why was it overturned unanimously on appeal.

      hint... You might be a moron.

  4. surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    As a company whose sole business model is based on privacy-invading advertising tracking analyticsm you'd think they'd be an employer that has any sort of morals and ethics?

    1. Re:surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /thread

  5. I was recruited for a dev position and felt bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Some people claimed it was bias against older workers and veterans.

    I was recruited for a dev position around 2007. I was pretty active in several Open Source projects and with one of the major community Linux distros. I had a pretty solid body of work that was publicly visible. Once I submitted my resume, the interaction changed somewhat. I was in the military about 10 years at the time, so in addition to my Open Source activities, I had quite a few years of military experience.

    When they thought I was just an Open Source dev (perhaps thinking that my day job was for some small mom & pop company), the recruiter was always eager to communicate with me. However, after they got my resume, they seemed less eager. I don't think it was age (I wasn't 30 yet), but perhaps being a military veteran had something to do with it. Perhaps they thought I would expect a higher salary based on my experience/education (I had earned my MS in Computer Engineering shortly prior). Who knows.

    Either way, I've known some folks who have worked at Google and other SV companies. Looking at where I am now I feel like I dodged a bullet, so it's all good.

  6. What does anyone expect? by Diac · · Score: 0

    Google is a company like any other.

    I think it is because everyone uses them that fan bias appears and makes people think that google is a good company as they do not want to think they are using a company that is anything but good.

    There not, there just a company.

    1. Re:What does anyone expect? by grep+-v+'.*'+* · · Score: 1

      Google: "Do No Evil."

      Current Evaluation: 50.0% Good, 49.9% Evil, 0.1% Indeterminate.

      CEO: So we're still good to go, right?


      By the way: Not "There not, there just a company" but "They're not, they're just a company."

      Unless you really mean "There not", in which case it depends on exactly where you are pointing. Currently, the moon is a good place to point, as neither Google nor Amazon has publicly flown a drone there. I wouldn't bet against their (there? they're?) R&D teams to get there (their? they're?) though.

      (It's kind of a "Let's eat, grandma" vs "Let's eat grandma" thing.)

      --
      If the universe is someone's simulation -- does that mean the stars are just stuck pixels?
    2. Re:What does anyone expect? by aphelion_rock · · Score: 2

      Why am I not surprised, this is performance based management at its finest. Set unrealistic KPI's to ensure only the fittest and strongest (or the biggest BSers survive).

    3. Re:What does anyone expect? by lucm · · Score: 2

      Google: "Do No Evil."

      That's the world we live in. It's not even possible for one of the most revolutionary companies in recent history to get away with a simple statement adopted while it was still a startup without having people using that 15 years later to bitch about an issue with one of the 72,000 employees.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    4. Re:What does anyone expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relax, no one is taking them to court. No one takes politicians to court for broken promises either.

    5. Re:What does anyone expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, the problem is not one employee: the company is as awful as any other money grubbing corporation.

    6. Re:What does anyone expect? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Google: "Do No Evil."

      No, it's "Don't Be Evil."

      (It's kind of a "Let's eat, grandma" vs "Let's eat grandma" thing.)

      Yes, it is. How ironic.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:What does anyone expect? by clickety6 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, their statement does categorically state that they should "Do No Evil" and not that they should "Do Only A Little Bit of Evil".

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
    8. Re:What does anyone expect? by tsqr · · Score: 2

      Google is a company like any other.

      I don't think so, although they're probably a lot like other Silicon Valley/San Francisco companies. Reading TFA, it's pretty obvious they have no idea how to run a successful flight test program. Here's a hint: it's not at all like crash-developing a social media app or ways to track your "customers".

    9. Re:What does anyone expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, it's "Don't Be Evil."

      Or.... "Don't, Be Evil!"

    10. Re:What does anyone expect? by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      I always thought of it as an imperative statement, not a declarative and self referential one.

      "(You,) don't be evil."

      When read that way, as it is actually written written, it leaves the writer free from all obligation, all the while having the plausible interpretation of being self referential. Perfectly weasel like and morally bankrupt.

      Just what you would expect from a bunch of evil bastards.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    11. Re:What does anyone expect? by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

      The thing is, everybody has their own view of what is evil and what is not.

      For some folks, evil has a very high bar, like blowing up a planet. And everything else below that is fair game.

      I know people who think it would be fine to rob banks and the only thing stopping them is the idea of getting caught. Not that the concept is inherently wrong, or evil. To them, the act of stealing is not a problem. It's not evil.

      So Google could easily come to the conclusion that doing whatever they wanted to do with this guy was just business and not evil. It's bullshit but there is nobody to tell Google this isn't right. The government isn't going to care about a man who is not a minority or other protected class. And Google can self-justify by saying it wasn't evil because heck, no government agency is even looking at it. Surely they'd say something if they were concerned.

      --
      Sig for hire.
    12. Re:What does anyone expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's "No, Do Evil"

    13. Re:What does anyone expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Revolutionary? They are a 1 trick pony selling ads and using all that money to buy other people's ideas. Can I just have Alta Vista back, please? Google is a pit of evil.

  7. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Recruiter interaction changes a lot as soon as you show interest... I get the feeling that recruiters are pretty aggressive trying to get tech people in for an interview. But from then on, they are less interested in making things happen...

  8. Age Descrimination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Google is a well known age discriminator.

  9. Is Google slowly Dieing? by BeemanIT · · Score: 3, Interesting

    After reading the article and also listening to some of Eli the computer guy Youtube videos, I feel that I am slowly seeing the beginnings of a Google death. Eli pointed out that if you look at the numbers for Youtube's business performance, technically they are in the red and loosing money. If you look at many of Google's other projects, they try stuff then turn around and keep scrapping it after a while, like a kid bored with their toy. Lastly, google may have a bunch of geniuses but they've been really lacking with the business mind. For example, people use youtube to make money as a business, however if something happens to your channel you have to jump through hoops to get it fixed.

    1. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Many of Google's geniuses have left to work on their startups, and poached other intelligent coworkers to join them.

      Google isn't the hot job anymore. The smart ones go to the new "it" company like SpaceX, or they do their own thing.

    2. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's hilarious that YouTube loses money under Google. YouTube went for 10 years ad free before Google bought it, and it was worth buying. Google adds ads and now it's losing money. Hahaha that's too good. It's almost as if ads aren't a source of infinite money for no effort.

    3. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Luthair · · Score: 2

      They have serious issues with follow through, the last successful product was probably Chromecast which while popular hasn't lit the world on fire (anecdotally it behaves worse for me today than when it was first released). The last really big success was Android nearly 9-years ago.

    4. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by citizenr · · Score: 1

      You will go far in life listening to business advice from a former third rate call center employee.

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    5. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by lucm · · Score: 1

      After reading the article and also listening to some of Eli the computer guy Youtube videos, I feel that I am slowly seeing the beginnings of a Google death.

      Google bought the backend automation created by Twitter to power their cloud computing service. I think that says it all.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    6. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by thebigmacd · · Score: 1

      Google bought Youtube (Nov 2006) less than two years after Youtube was founded (Feb 2005).

    7. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by cheesybagel · · Score: 3, Informative

      Android was acquired.

    8. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As others have already pointed out, Google is no longer the cool place to be. However, since they are amongst the wealthiest companies in the world, they have managed to keep up appearances for quite some time. But you're right, is starting to show cracks by now.

      As for money, they're printing it. 86 billion USD revenue last year. 95% of that is from ads, so yeah, most other projects will be toys, as you say. Youtube is probably not making much money, but I doubt they are losing much either. Gmail and the Apps suite is probably in plus, with selling subscriptions to Fortune 500 companies and large government organizations, universities. Android, Maps, Street View are all money drains, but of course very strategic in terms of ads and overall market control. The rest is fringe, hobbies, or split out as other companies under Alphabet, e.g. Waymo for self-driving cars.

      Google will not die or disappear any time soon, though. Just like IBM, Oracle, Microsoft, they will linger on as behemoths, with all the fun long gone.

    9. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by loufoque · · Score: 2

      Is making money loose a bad thing?
      Or maybe you meant 'losing'?

    10. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by hawguy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Google bought Youtube (Nov 2006) less than two years after Youtube was founded (Feb 2005).

      That doesn't change the fact that prior to Feb 2005, not a single ad ran on Youtube.

    11. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      last successful product was probably Chromecast

      If that's true, then that's really sad, given that Chromecast is of such little value.

    12. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Chromecast is a stupid product though.

      why it's stupid? it could just as have Android TV which would be a much more logical product for google to push. it could have all the chromecast features and more.

      the hw is capable enough, so there wouldn't be added costs to the BOM either - also it would make it more useful by itself.

      I got a local cable(well, fiber really) provided android settop box and it does everything the chromecast does( I can stream to it with multiple protocols, from phone or whatever) and it can browser the web by it's own and run android apps(no play store by default though because licensing).

      so instead of making a google lead android tv product they just made a .. streaming dongle, basically, with the same internals that could run android proper.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    13. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your sister is really loose although...

    14. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      And your post reinforces the fact that you are not interested in intellectual discourse, but instead are looking for anything to contradict, no matter how stupid it makes you look. You might want to take a look at that.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    15. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by hawguy · · Score: 2

      And your post reinforces the fact that you are not interested in intellectual discourse, but instead are looking for anything to contradict, no matter how stupid it makes you look. You might want to take a look at that.

      You're looking for intellectual discourse on Slashdot, yet I'm the stupid one!?

    16. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Google tried that, Google TV got crushed because none of the content providers would make apps for it..

      So they bypassed it by creating Chromecast, if the content providers streamed it you could put it on your TV.. now they seem more willing to play ball with AndroidTV but there's still many times I find my self chrome-casting something that there's no app for... like NCAA Basketball or most all cable news feeds.

    17. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      seriously, I gotta ask - do you have some kind of a brain disease - perhaps autism?

      guy1: youbube made money for 10 years and was ad free.
      guy2: no, youtube lost money before google, and it was for under 2 years
      you: that doesn't change the fact that there were no ads for those 2 years.

      I find your kind of thinking common in socially inept autistic people. I've seen it at work much too often. I fire people like you of course - you're unproductive, annoying, and usually quite ugly. You take a completely irrelevant small point that no one is arguing and pretend the conversation is about that. My theory is you actually cannot tell what the conversation is about, because you're socially inept.

    18. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you not a native speaker? then don't correct people. there are different rules for different places. do you bug your friends when they don't use complete sentences in sms? why not? that's impropper grammer.

      the rest of us got what he was trying to say. you seem to be to stupid to contribute content on topic, so you correct people's spelling? the only thing that counts here is we all get what we're all saying. this isn't a newspaper. if you think more formal rules should apply... well, no one gives a fuck what you think. you're just an annoying spammer. at least the gnaa is funny - you're just annoying. i'm guessing one of those annoying ugly nerds I used to shove into lockers when I was growing up.

      we all know the difference between lose and loose. what we don't do is pay attention or proofread our posts - because we have better shit going on in our lives. you don't. sucks to be an ugly loser.

    19. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Which backend would that be?

    20. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > grammer

    21. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      As for money, they're printing it. 86 billion USD revenue last year. 95% of that is from ads

      And that's something that should really be concerning them. The ad market is a huge bubble - companies are increasingly seeing reduced returns from ads and most of the things that people have tried to increase this have had the opposite effect. Google has recently made the news for advertising top brands (which pay a huge amount for adverts) next to ISIS beheading videos and racist rants, which doesn't help build a positive brand image for any of these companies. It wouldn't take much for some of their biggest customers to see advertising with Google as a negative, at which point Google's revenue dries up overnight.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    22. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ouch, a bunch of folks which did not pass the phone screen at Google?

    23. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use caps.

    24. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Luthair · · Score: 1

      Yes, years before it was released.

    25. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by Luthair · · Score: 1

      I think ultimately Chromecast, or wireless displays generally make more sense. Why have a lot of devices with different interfaces that all need to be updated?

    26. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Google basically does not have anything exceptional these days, and even search pretty much sucks. Should they ever go out of business, better alternatives will become available soon after.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    27. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by kriston · · Score: 1

      Amazon's Fire TV stick is what Chromecast should have been. It can be casted to just like Cromecast and has far more features and benefits.

      --

      Kriston

    28. Re:Is Google slowly Dieing? by kriston · · Score: 1

      That package includes its mobile application development platform Fabric, the Crashlytics crash-reporting platform, mobile app analytics tool Answers, SMS login system Digits, and development automation system Fastlane.

      https://www.fool.com/investing/2017/01/23/google-buys-parts-of-twitter-but-doesnt-want-the-w.aspx

      --

      Kriston

    29. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      found the millennial who got lost on his way to reddit. we don't use the greater then sign hear to quote someone, you fucking 15 year old ugly moron. also - we welcome you here with open arms. we love having people around to provide us with entertainment. now say more things please.

    30. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hitting the shift key on my phone with my thumb, as I am taking a crap slows down the typing greatly. auto-cap is turned off, because I'm not an ugly college-age nerd like you are, so I often need to type things for work that are not sentences.

      yeah, I could take more time and pay attention to what I type. but why would I? this is not a newspaper, and the rules you made up for this site - well no one gives a fuck about your opinion here. you see, that extra time you take to do your posts - add that up over a month. those 2 extra hours you spend on here that I don't... I'm fucking someone way out of your league. But I'll give this to you: you'll always have your grammer. you win at life. I loose.

    31. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh! the expert is here! thanks for letting us know buddy, I couldn't do my job without you - you are the expert here.

      Here's the way the world works oh great one. Vendors provide me resources with hardware by a margin redirect, or I buy services. If I don't like someone, they're gone. Then there are some 1099s and small corp2corp. this isn't the fucking hr department or a pool of secretaries. this is an IT site, and we do IT. and you seem to know nothing about how it's done, so you assume a bunch of shit about how most of the world works from your 2 limited experiences - wrong shit. whatever reason they have for underperforming - pregnant, old, autistic, or just plain old stupid - I only care about the end result, and it's the same. They're bad at their job, and they're gone. got any more smart things to say fucktard?

      by the way, since you're a nerd fratboy wannabe and use expressions like "sink you" that professional older adults with 20 years of industry experience ignore, I'll let you in on a little secret. You, your opinion, your experience - it's the clown in the room. That 'ADA' lawsuit some retard will have against my 80k employee international company that's almost 300 years old - it would go nowhere. My mentality is not against mental disability, nor any other thing. It's against the performance of someone. And some antisocial autistic freak is unwelcome. because of the antisocial freak factor. whatever it's caused by - no one gives a shit. And if someone I fire goes postal, I don't give a fuck. I will take out my gun and shoot them. Me or many other people. Now please, do say some more things clownbags. Your opinions and knowledge are very entertaining. And I'm pretty sure your salary is how much I tip after dinner.

    32. Re: Is Google slowly Dieing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How goes your struggle with mental illness?

  10. This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in 2009 when everything was hitting the fan I was working for a very well-known mixed-signal semiconductor company. I was on a team of 5 engineers doing the analog front end (this was a wireless transceiver) our of a total team of about 75 including digital and software. Money was running out and the site director intimated that our design center would get shut down if we didn't deliver. Well, I worked 29 straight days, on average 12 hours a day (and some days more than that). We all did. Anyway, we got the chip out the door on a thursday and no one came in until monday. And then I got laid off (along with 10 percent of the company). I was so mad I could just spit, and everyone on my team (people I thought were my friends) all avoided me and looked away as I was escorted from the building after giving my heart and soul to get this part out the door. I guess they didn't want to catch whatever got me laid off.

    I was offered a quite generous "salary continuation" offer where if I agreed not to sue or whatever, they would pay my salary for up to three months while I looked for another job. (looking for work when you are unemployed is just slightly harder than looking for work when you have AIDS).

    Anyway, I'm pretty good at what I do and interview well, so I got another job in no time, although I negotiated a couple of months delay before I started so I could milk my salary continuation for a while.

    I still don't know why I was laid off, as I was easily in the top 25% of the company as far as performance reviews goes, and a couple of dead weight guys on the digital side stayed. Who knows?

    I didn't get hospitalized from overwork but I most certainly got sick and burned out. I started crying for no reason all the time the first couple of weeks after the layoff and was generally a mess. I stayed with my girlfriend (we were long distance, now married in the same place, yay!) and kind of dried out. But what an awful experience.

    1. Re:This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got laid off (along with 10 percent of the company). I was so mad I could just spit, and everyone on my team (people I thought were my friends) all avoided me and looked away as I was escorted from the building

      Hmm...

      I still don't know why I was laid off, as I was easily in the top 25% of the company as far as performance reviews goes, and a couple of dead weight guys on the digital side stayed. Who knows?

      Oh this is way too easy. You see, the problem is that you're an asshole, and nobody liked you. When it came time to get rid of people, they got rid of you and nobody was bothered by it.

    2. Re:This kind of happened to me by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 2

      You didn't play golf or belong to the same 'Country Club' as the boss.

      Simple really.
      It is not you but who you know that keeps you in a job these days.
      I'm glad that I called it a day last October. Now I do the odd one or two days of work a week.
      My BP has gone down so much that I'm off the meds.

      --
      I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    3. Re:This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad idea.
      You need to set realistic goals. If you have to work 29 straight days 12h a day with a whole team of people, then someone in management fucked up.
      It's not your job to fix that, especially if you don't get reimbursed with a month off for instance.
      It's your job (or your manager) to say this is impossible, but we will do as much as we can (8h per day for 5 days a week).
      I work overtime every now and then, but my boss know I will take out those hours either in extra pay, or in hours that I don't work on other days.

    4. Re: This kind of happened to me by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for you but this isn't even possible for me. I design for a living. I develop for a living. When I am on a project I will wake up at 2 AM with the solution to a problem. There is no way there company could compensate me hourly in an appropriate fashion.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    5. Re:This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and people wonder why I tell kids to steer far clear from STEM in the West?

    6. Re:This kind of happened to me by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      [I was easily in the top 25%] the problem is that you're an asshole, and nobody liked you.

      Those with the biggest egos are indeed usually the worse employees. There are exceptions, but they are rare.

      If you think you are superior, there's a very good chance you are a jerk and don't know it. I'm just the messenger. (A fantastic messenger, the best, I know messaging, everyone knows it bigly.)

    7. Re:This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      you may be an American, we generally tend to equate our self - worth with our job... so you started crying because you lost your job and thus your self - worth declined significantly... Just a guess.

      I know how it goes. been there, picking yourself up, dusting yourself off and starting over again are hard, but people say it so tritely. Emotions run deep.

      A retired Marine I used to work with said to me once that "Intellect is a speck on the sea of emotion." and I have seen example after example that prove him correct. I am glad you got back on your feet.

      Live Long and Prosper.

    8. Re:This kind of happened to me by computational+super · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the problem is that you're an asshole

      You're being (ironically) an asshole, but you're probably right - not the way you mean (which is just to be a spiteful, petty, vindictive prick) but that he had probably built himself a reputation of being "difficult" to work with. That's easy to do when you're the go-to guy for a dozen different things - everybody's demanding 100% of your time, all the time, relying on you to dig them out of the hole they've dug themselves into - you have to turn some people away. Especially when you're already working 12 hour days to meet some insane deadline - you just don't have time to deal with all the people who aren't carrying their own weight.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    9. Re:This kind of happened to me by computational+super · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, until we all (collectively) grow a pair and start doing this as a unified group, these sorts of abuses will continue.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    10. Re:This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Layoffs and hires can be semi random, please don't think about "why". If they had a 10% edict it might have been the roll of a die if they couldn't see a clear under-performer.

    11. Re: This kind of happened to me by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

      There is no way there company could compensate me hourly in an appropriate fashion.

      Maybe if the did compensate you "appropriately", you could take a grammar course.

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    12. Re: This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "they"

    13. Re:This kind of happened to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were a threat to your parasitic manager who has been laying off anyone who threatens to take his position for years.

    14. Re: This kind of happened to me by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      Or the is such a thing as auto miscorrect ... Douchebag.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  11. Google is just following the rules of acquisition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Rule of acquisition #10: Greed is eternal.

    Rule of acquisition #23: Nothing is more important than your health, except for your money.

    Rule of acquisition #48: The bigger the smile, the sharper the knife.

    Rule of acquisition #95: Expand or die.

    Rule of acquisition #111: Treat people in your debt like family; exploit them.

    Rule of acquisition #211: Employees are the rungs on the ladder of success. Don't hesitate to step on them.

  12. Who needs Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just take what you have and make the most of it and let others be damned. Not such good advice if you have drunk the Kool-Aid and are already working with a bunch of other people who only want to build an idea until it comes time to sell out. This is because the almighty dollar is such a crippling group-think scam. Instead, my advice is to buy a Lifetime Premier Internet Connection and cut off all contact with others who might influence your project and set about trying to totally automate your life and build a prosthetic brain to adapt you to climate change. Build your project around a media studio which does everything you want, so much so, that it becomes personalized and it only has value to you. Do it in a country with universal health care that recognizes your involvement with your project as a disability that invalidates your ability to function in the workplace. Buy everything you need for pennies from China and solve one problem at a time. Make about 12000 builds of your code, over the couple of decades that we have left, by which time your consciousness will be integrated with about 500 terabytes of Ram and will have no need for food or oxygen. Don't forget to open source your code so backups are safe and nobody will put a value on it, particularly if your licence agreement excludes Chairmen of Central Banks, their kin, extended tribe and/or any supporters of Capitalism.

  13. Don't Be Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Oh wait, they took over the Dr. title from Microsoft years ago. Dr. Evil, Google didn't study 7 years to be called Mr.

    Microsoft? They are now Sean.

  14. Re:Google is just following the rules of acquisiti by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1
    1. Collect underpants
    2. ?
    3. Profit
  15. hmmm.... by crgrace · · Score: 2

    So this guy collapsed from working in the heat in the California Central Valley. In February.

    Was he inside the cab of a truck with the heat on too high? It's lucky to get into the mid-50s in the Central Valley in the winter.

    1. Re:hmmm.... by CrashNBrn · · Score: 1

      Yeah, even SoCal in the Winter doesn't get much above 80'F, and when/if it does - only briefly (for an hour or two) ~2pm.

    2. Re:hmmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They left out where the guy was 500lbs.

  16. Bias Against Older IT Workers by twmcneil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Film at Eleven

    --
    "The ferrets, they're every where I tell you!"
  17. 100 degrees?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn! Water boils at that temperature. How could he have survived?!

    1. Re:100 degrees?! by courteaudotbiz · · Score: 1

      Obviously, they were talking about Farhenheit, not Celcius. 100F = 37,7778C. Which is still pretty hot. For me the northeastern Canadian.

    2. Re:100 degrees?! by sanosuke001 · · Score: 2

      If they left off the unit they definitely meant kelvin; 100 kelvin is downright chilly! No idea how he got heatstroke :/

      --
      -SaNo
    3. Re:100 degrees?! by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "100F = 37,7778C."

      Only in Tucson.

    4. Re:100 degrees?! by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      They were also talking about February...in the central valley, CA.

      It doesn't get that hot in February around here. That's how you know something about the story stinks.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    5. Re:100 degrees?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so your joke is what? "they specified it's anything but kelvins, so it's in kelvins - haha." you know where they left off the unit? on your body. but you're not getting laid because of your face, not the outie belly button between your legs.

    6. Re:100 degrees?! by fisted · · Score: 1

      I realize you're trying to be funny, but they did say 'degrees', which rules out Kelvin.

      And before you wonder, yes, I'm a blast at parties.

    7. Re:100 degrees?! by prunus.avium · · Score: 1

      Note the previous poster said "northeastern Canadian." I'm guessing he means Quebec which uses the French numeric style where the decimal mark is a comma instead of a period. The thousand's separator is also a space instead of the comma.

      So the asking price of a Tesla Model 6 P100D of $186,200.00 would be 186 200,00$ in Quebec (ignoring silly Quebec tariffs and taxes...).

    8. Re:100 degrees?! by computational+super · · Score: 1

      Well, he wasn't water.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
  18. Re:Google is just following the rules of acquisiti by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Rule of late-stage capitalism #97: Money stolen is twice as sweet as money earned.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  19. Fake News by zitsky · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Obviously Google would never do something like this /sarcasm

    1. Re:Fake News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't claim it's fake, per se, but there is something odd about these and I doubt this story just happened by accident.

      The media often has a story to tell you and then it searches for facts in support, ignoring anything that might discredit what it wants to say.

    2. Re:Fake News by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      They would. But they "Do No Evil".

    3. Re:Fake News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two things:

      1) It's "Don't be evil."
      2) They did away with the "n't" two minutes after coming up with (1).

  20. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by m00sh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some people claimed it was bias against older workers and veterans.

    I was recruited for a dev position around 2007. I was pretty active in several Open Source projects and with one of the major community Linux distros. I had a pretty solid body of work that was publicly visible. Once I submitted my resume, the interaction changed somewhat. I was in the military about 10 years at the time, so in addition to my Open Source activities, I had quite a few years of military experience.

    When they thought I was just an Open Source dev (perhaps thinking that my day job was for some small mom & pop company), the recruiter was always eager to communicate with me. However, after they got my resume, they seemed less eager. I don't think it was age (I wasn't 30 yet), but perhaps being a military veteran had something to do with it. Perhaps they thought I would expect a higher salary based on my experience/education (I had earned my MS in Computer Engineering shortly prior). Who knows.

    Either way, I've known some folks who have worked at Google and other SV companies. Looking at where I am now I feel like I dodged a bullet, so it's all good.

    Since companies will not give feedback on why they didn't hire you, there is no way to know why things went the way they went.

    I got declined for a job. I had a friend who worked there and told me why I was declined. I was completely off base about what I thought was going on. He said it was just one guy who was completely against me since I had given a really bad answer to a technical question he asked. The guy didn't show it at all and he it didn't even register that he had such a huge grudge against me.

  21. Well of course.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have first hand experience with Google's " age and veteran discrimination" policy. Until they replace their corporate culture, that will be the law of their land.

  22. bitch-buddies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Page & Brin
    Lots of grim
    Smash their face
    & kick their shins.

  23. Re: Google is just following the rules of acquisit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You conflate Capitalism with Cronyism...but then, all of you who believe in "late-stage Capitalism" as a gateway to "Democratic Socialism" (which is, again, simply Cronyism) are ignorant of the conflation, so I suppose I'm simply pointing out the obvious.

  24. I was so mad I could just spit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hm. Post Office needs more like you.

    There was a Trump joke in there, but it's just so fucked up beyond repair that, that, that I could just spit.

    Pfew! Thanks, man! Was planning to take everyone out!

  25. If it was the past 2 years.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We had spikes that were up to 80 degrees from 50-60ish during the day.

    Depending on where you were from and the severity of the temperature change I could certainly see someone working outside doing strenuous activities getting heatstroke, especially if they were dressed for colder temperatures and didn't get changed in time, perhaps due to the project they were working on, or simply the point at which discomfort for them crosses with becoming a health risk.

    Having said that, WTF does google have going on in the central valley? Everything I know of involving them is in the bay area or a bunch of satellite offices in the big cities in the western coastal states.

    Curious.

  26. Re: Google is just following the rules of acquisit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Capitalism begets Cronyism. The Market pays people to undermine the integrity of the Market. Eventually it becomes more profitable to subvert public ownership of the state than to compete equitably. Only by strong measures can this be prevented.

  27. OSHA violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like an OSHA violation. The guy should get himself a lawyer.

  28. Google buys companies to get young, hard working by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    engineers. Nobody wants to bother with older IT guys. Their experience doesn't matter that much because you just don't need that many experienced techs to watch over the young guys and they can't work 60+ hour work weeks and be productive. Human beings just don't work that way.

    What does irritate me though is seeing them spouting anti-Union / laissez faire clap-trap right up until they're personally discriminated against. Then they want the government to step in an regulate. But the young guys wanting to unionize or (God forbid) have a living minimum wage? Let 'em just work harder. Good for goose, good for gander. Or how about we protect _all_ workers?

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  29. Re:Old people exist in business for one reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    kill yourself now

  30. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by darkain · · Score: 4, Interesting

    *OR*, if companies DO give you feedback, it is total made up bullshit. I was recently turned down on a job I was applying for and already had the in-person interview for. Reason? I "didn't have enough experience" with a particular open-source application. Said application is something that I've used daily for 10+ years now, and so far into it that I find bugs, debug them, and submit patches and have them approved. If knowing the software well enough to literally fix it when it goes wrong wasn't enough, then what the hell is!?

  31. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I bet there is more to this story than the one-sided clickbait piece.

  32. Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 2

    Guess we've seen that it was nothing but horseshit and they're yet another evil empire.

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
    1. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 4, Funny

      Google did try becoming evil in hopes of increasing profits, but just like all the other times they suddenly gave up on the project without explanation.

    2. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember it having been horseshit even back when they had it. 2001 or some such.

    3. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Oligonicella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not only do I remember when Google proclaimed that rule, I remember when SlashDot was loaded to the eyeteeth with Google fanbois.

    4. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google is a terrible company. Their practices are downright shameful.

    5. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Google is a terrible company. Their practices are downright shameful.

      But they are Democrats. Feel free to interpret that statement according to your politics.

    6. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They still 'have' it. It is just 'do no evil as we see fit'. That is a dangerous position to be in. As if you guess wrong you may actually be the ones doing something very evil but think you are doing the right thing. I am going to goodwin this. Remember the nazis thought they were on the right side of history too. The other side won and wrote the history and showed them for what they really were.

    7. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They used to be a very innovative company, putting out products like Gmail and Maps. Even now they have no serious rival for search, although I expect a newcomer to be eating their lunch within the next 10 years.

      Quietly dumping the "no evil" slogan was the beginning of the end.

    8. Re:Hey remember when they had that no evil rule? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even now they have no serious rival for search, although I expect a newcomer to be eating their lunch within the next 10 years.

      Their search algorithms suck and have been getting progressively worse since their heyday. (This decline almost perfectly correlates with fuzzy searches that will drop or change any or most of your search terms to maximize the number of hits.)

      The only advantage they have over other engines is the size of their index. Meta-engines that use their results do as good a job, or better.

  33. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt bi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people are dicks, and this was just their way of letting you down gently.

  34. So glad they didn't hire me. Dodged a bullet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The belief I've developed over the past decade is that Google management flat out does not understand that there is a difference between software and not-software. I got interviewed for a job with their robotics project just after it started, before it completely imploded, and looking back now I'm so glad they didn't hire me. Look at the rest of their hardware track record. Google chromebooks, phones, and tablets? Cars? Glass? It's all dead in the water or vaporware. With the exception of the Pixel phone and Chromecast dongles, they have never had a successful hardware product. And now the people who interviewed me five years ago in that Palo Alto office building are applying for jobs where I work, because Google can't figure out how to do anything useful with the ten billion dollars worth of personnel and IP that they bought. They're incredibly bad at managing hardware projects.

    1. Re:So glad they didn't hire me. Dodged a bullet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I lived in Albuquerque working on safety critical avionics for Honeywell when Google recruiters came calling on behalf of Titan Aerospace. At first I engaged them but after researching Google, I decided to pass. Google culture was not for me.

      Months later they shutdown their operation in NM after spending many millions on buildings and infrastructure and moved it to CA. Then they shutdown the entire operation. What a waste.

      Now this. Yep I dodged a bullet.

    2. Re:So glad they didn't hire me. Dodged a bullet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. Most software people don't get hardware. Even electrical engineers have a hard time wrapping their head around why it takes a 5 week lead time to get that fancy bit of metal for mechanical engineering. I mean, can't you just work harder?? Nope, raw materials have to be sourced, machined, processed, etc, etc, etc. Can't just press a button and hit run.

  35. A recurring problem in "technology" companies by dbIII · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A recurring problem in "technology" companies is that people want to hire their clone instead of working out that people with a range of experiences is a useful thing in a workplace.
    That's why so many places are a sausage fest with a very narrow age range and almost identical career path for everyone. It's kind of weird visiting some of those places, watching nerf stuff fly and feeling like the only adult in the room.

    1. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by lucm · · Score: 1

      A players hire A players. B players hire C players.

      For low-quality people, it's usually not about diversity (or lack of), it's always about control. They look out for their small kingdom instead of trying to find the best talent.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    2. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's about control, a team of A players never gets anything [useful] done. "Too many chefs in the kitchen" comes to mind.

      B players actually hire B, C, A, etc... control is independent. And having a small kingdom is a strategy to reduce your workload. I disagree with it, but It works for most since the saying: "work smart, not hard" can be a result.

      A players hire A players cause they can't manage, have no idea on executing, no idea of budgeting, and think they know the one way to be successful. Group think is a side effect and you get all these brainiac companies making great PR/hype disappearing in 3 yrs with everyone back at the Univ in some post doc program.

      A+ players hire a diversity of folks. Building the right team takes time.

      Now I gotta go back to my desk and dodge those nerf bullets.

    3. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Very much so. Unfortunately, A players are rare, but B and C players abound.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    4. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Not so. But most B and C players like to use bogus explanations like yours.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    5. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by dbIII · · Score: 1

      That's part of the problem quote altering guy. An "A player", no matter how capable, hiring their clone for a very different role is going to result in boredom and departure if the role is way below the current level of their abilities or a series of fuckups if it is well beyond their abilities.
      Also what's wrong with a "B player" or "C player" if that's all the role requires?

    6. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by lucm · · Score: 1

      Also what's wrong with a "B player" or "C player" if that's all the role requires?

      There are no roles that require B or C players, except maybe for suicide bombers. It's not an org chart or skill hierarchy, it's a matter of excellence within a group of peers.

      For instance if you own a big grocery store, you can have various kinds of people stocking the shelves. Some will do an excellent job and will keep an eye out for systemic issues (e.g. it would be possible to stock more shelves if the cleaning crew shift wasn't working at the same time as the shelves restocking team) and continuous improvement opportunities (e.g. what if we started with perishable products instead of cans). Meanwhile, the B and C players will at best do the minimum effort to not get fired, and given any opportunity they will cut corners and go smoke a reefer in the warehouse.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    7. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Ah, personal definitions.
      Why bother even commenting if you cannot communicate clearly?
      So with your personal definition there are only employable people (group A) and for some reason two groups of unemployable people (B and C)? Why bother dividing up the second group when you are not dividing up the first?

    8. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by lucm · · Score: 1

      Ah, personal definitions.
      Why bother even commenting if you cannot communicate clearly?
      So with your personal definition there are only employable people (group A) and for some reason two groups of unemployable people (B and C)?

      No, that's no my "personal definition", that's your flawed and/or dishonest interpretation. That's you modus operandi, you always come late to the discussion and add condescending comments that make no sense to anyone but you.

      There's nothing new about "A players hire A players; B players hire C players", even Steve Jobs used to say that. It's hard to tell why in this case you've decided to be a cunt about it. Bored much?

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    9. Re:A recurring problem in "technology" companies by dbIII · · Score: 1

      you always come late to the discussion and add condescending comments that make no sense to anyone but you.

      Pot lying while calling the refrigerator black.
      That one should make sense to you quote altering guy.

      There's nothing new about "A players hire A players; B players hire C players", even Steve Jobs used to say that

      What's new is your redefinition of all of the players, plus it's bullshit anyway. You don't hire a guy with a doctorate and a dozen years experience to make sure the photocopier is full of paper.

  36. Re: Google is just following the rules of acquisit by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You conflate Capitalism with Cronyism

    Cronyism is the inevitable result when Capitalism enters its malignancy stage, which it did about 1980. Now it's stage 4 Capitalism.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  37. Older guy in his mid 50's? by outofoptions · · Score: 2

    Try mid 60's like me. I've been offered indefinite contract jobs, but full time employment? I'm not working for less than people that know less than me. A security 'forensic specialist' that didn't have a clue as to what email headers were? REALLY?

    1. Re:Older guy in his mid 50's? by m00sh · · Score: 0

      Try mid 60's like me. I've been offered indefinite contract jobs, but full time employment? I'm not working for less than people that know less than me. A security 'forensic specialist' that didn't have a clue as to what email headers were? REALLY?

      You're in your mid-60s? You should be retiring. You have SS and medicare. Why do you want full time employment?

      I'm in my mid 30s and I plan for retirement like crazy so that I can retire in my mid 60s.

    2. Re:Older guy in his mid 50's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sir, wait until you get to your mid-sixties before you speak...

    3. Re:Older guy in his mid 50's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Friend of the family runs a retiree community. He says that the people who keep working are mentally sharper, in better health, and generally live longer. It only takes a few years of leisure time to begin the decay.

    4. Re: Older guy in his mid 50's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leisure time can be hard work, if you can motivate yourself

    5. Re:Older guy in his mid 50's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In your mid 30's you should be going on long holidays, enjoying the beach, parties and girls, doing loads of sporting activities and appreciating you knees, eyesight and hearing whilst you still having them.

      Or you could be planning to do all that in retirement when you don't.

    6. Re:Older guy in his mid 50's? by judoguy · · Score: 1

      You're in your mid-60s? You should be retiring. You have SS and medicare. Why do you want full time employment?

      I'm in my mid 30s and I plan for retirement like crazy so that I can retire in my mid 60s.

      Not on SS and Medicare you won't. SS benefits are puny but at least they're taxed as income.

      MediCrap is a partial insurance system that forces you to buy additional insurance. Actually forces you whether you want it or not.

      I'm in my mid 60's and it will take 3 months or so of SS benefits just pay the house taxes on my median priced home.

      In 30 years SS won't even exist unless the benefits are effectively debased out of existence by inflation. $100,000 a year sounds great until a loaf of bread costs $1000.

      --
      Peace is easy to achieve, just surrender. Liberty is much harder get/keep.
  38. I would easily discriminate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only hire 35-65 years old Americans or any qualified foreigner (H-1B, green cards, etc). Higher work and other ethics, and fewer problems.

  39. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by starblazer · · Score: 1

    These middle class republican beat the republican drum until they are personally inconvenienced. After that... democrat, broke republican on socialis^Wmedicare, or dead.

  40. Health insurance by DogDude · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Health insurance is much, much more expensive for older people than for younger. Companies have a tremendous economic incentive to discriminate against older workers. Health care needs to be single payer.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Health insurance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Health insurance is much, much more expensive for older people than for younger. Companies have a tremendous economic incentive to discriminate against older workers. Health care needs to be single payer.

      No quite. Corporations buy group plans. The age and demographic is irrelevant for these policies, as are existing conditions. It's the personal / family / individual private plans that ramp up premiums and deducible for those over 40.

    2. Re:Health insurance by DigiShaman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I cracks me up EVERY FUCKING TIME, that those that advocate for more government are CLUELESS that government is responsible for the very problems they create in the first place!

      "Today I got raped by my master. I need to suck his cock so that he will rape me less"

      Ever think that enabling and empowering the very people you entrust that fucked you over the first time somehow will yield a different result?? Naawwww, couldn't be that.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    3. Re:Health insurance by tommeke100 · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't it be pretty evenly distributed, given that you buy insurance your whole life, but chances of big health costs are much lower at an early age. So you're banking for later years. By the time you really need hospital visits, you may already have spend 6 figures on insurance without ever asking.

    4. Re:Health insurance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insurance companies are responsible for this problem, not government.

    5. Re:Health insurance by Pascoea · · Score: 2

      Some, like the company I work for, are self-insured. The insurance card may say "blue cross" but it comes out of the company pocket book.

    6. Re:Health insurance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think those lazy asses in congress actually wrote those laws? No, the insurance companies did.

    7. Re:Health insurance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure that made sense inside your right wing echo chamber. Meanwhile, out here in the real world, I find myself asking the following:

      1. - Your argument seems to suggest that older workers being discriminated against is something the government does. Wat?

      2. - Your argument seems to suggest that there is a valid healthcare option that can take place only in a medical marketplace completely unfettered by regulation of any sort. Citation needed.

    8. Re:Health insurance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well your problem is not the quantity of government but the quality.

      That very many people don't understand that is also part of the problem.

      A small government will screw you just as well if not more than a big government. There are plenty of examples of small corrupt governments working with large powerful corporations to screw the normal folk.

      The corporations will happily take over the profitable stuff that the small government can't.

      Many stupid people asking for "Small Government" don't realize there's no freedom of speech in CorporateLand, there's no right to bear arms in Disneyland. Good luck applying the freedom of information act to Apple. Good luck asking Corporations to hold elections so that the stupid sheeple can vote who is CEO.

      Your government is at least still _pretending_ to give you that sort of stuff. In contrast many US Corporations have already stopped pretending to give people "freedom of speech" (more used to maintain the illusion). They now go "your speech has to be in line with CorporateLand policies/T&C".

  41. Re: Google is just following the rules of acquisit by Oligonicella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Human nature is cronyism. All systems are rife with it.

  42. Just stop being sheep already. by JustNiz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Sorry but I have little sympathy for people that wont stand up to their employer even when obviously being taken advantage of or even abused.

    1. Re:Just stop being sheep already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You stand up to your employer in today's climate and you become unemployed. Be unemployed for too long and you become unemployable. Turning 40 and expecting a work life balance isn't possible for many. Trust me, it happens. Perhaps not for you... but it happens.

    2. Re:Just stop being sheep already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sorry but I have little sympathy for people that wont stand up to their employer even when obviously being taken advantage of or even abused.

      Employers have the financial resources to CRUSH you like the insignificant insect that you are.

      That's reality.

      Now go back to your video games.

    3. Re:Just stop being sheep already. by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      >> Employers have the financial resources to CRUSH you like the insignificant insect that you are. That's reality.

      Ridiculous. All they can do is fire you. Chances are they won't because they need you, otherwise they wouldn't be hiring you in the first place. If they only need you because you're a pushover and easily taken advantage of, then you're better off out of there anyway.

    4. Re:Just stop being sheep already. by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      >> You stand up to your employer in today's climate and you become unemployed.

      Thats a great sign that you're better off out of there anyway.

      >> Turning 40 and...Perhaps not for you...

      Yeah you're right. I'm 54 and am getting job offers coming in all the time.

      >> ... but it happens.
      Then maybe you need to not be so passive, grow some balls, and learn some new skills that people actually need.

    5. Re:Just stop being sheep already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. Totally this. Never ever move for your employer to "keep your job." If your negotiating position is so weak you cannot change jobs locally, you need to fix that ASAP. I worked for a company that tried this. No one moved. Everyone had a new job before they had spent the severance. Management knew it would happen, but corporate didn't care so they lost all their talent.

    6. Re:Just stop being sheep already. by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      This is what happens when your freshly minted MBAs get to run the shop. They think everyone with the same job title are interchangeable widgets. Newsflash: they're not!

      The reality of software and services is sales runs are cyclical. When employees are widgets (like factory workers) the company hires them when the sales get hot, and they lay off when the sales go cold. However, with software and services you have other options that can smooth out those cyclical ebbing and flowing by making architectural decisions up front. By making decisions, like allowing on line automated upgrades, payments, and the like you can avoid the jarring changes to personnel - while allowing for real structural growth for long term hires instead.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  43. Shit diversity quotas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember, you MUST hire AT LEAST 20% female and non-white.
    But 50y+ white guy? fire away, that'll make space for your 20% quota.

    (These are the official-not-official quotas you gotta match to stay manager. I mean it's not required because legal issues. But if you don't you'll also be pushed out.)

    The situation's so fucked up.

  44. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt bi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My white penis let me negotiate a higher base salary.

  45. what about more workers rights like the EU? or uni by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    what about more workers rights like the EU? or unions?

  46. Most Recruiters suck some times they have very by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Most Recruiters suck some times they have very little info on the job it self and want to come into the office. It's like some are on a quota or the firm wants to look good by saying we have a big number on people on file.

    Other like to edit your resume to jam you into a job that are not a fit for and other times it's bs like we need to edit to a long form federal resume.

    1. Re:Most Recruiters suck some times they have very by war4peace · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's why I only keep recruiters for two weeks into my LinkedIn contacts after they add me. If they don't communicate at all with me for two weeks, they're out.
      One of them has added me 12 times and counting!
      I've seen recruiters boasting on LinkedIn about them having tens of thousands of contacts... all used as leverage to seem more competent than they are.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  47. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A union only buys you a 2nd boss, not necessarily real representation. Good engineers have more personal leverage than they could gain from outsourcing it to a union representative who represents the union, not you personally.

    There's a fair point in creating real worker protections at the federal level, though.

  48. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt b by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Not in the NBA, it doesn't.

  49. This worked for me... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From 1994-2007 I worked in cities that cost TONS to live in (NY City, Atlanta etc.) & saved money (doing roommates) to come back home to a LOW COST city (after making 3-4x what I could here) to get into real estate (breaking free of the "wageslave" model & being STUPID believing what I call "the beer commercial life" ala "get a little capt. in you" preying on the fact that in your 20's-30's "young, dumb, full of come" nature as a male you exist on/for (which is the "flower of your youth" & reproductive urge essentially)).

    * The BIGGEST hardest trick? Maintain discipline & sit on your dough until you can buy into a BETTER way of life (where you are BOTH the CEO & yet the janitor too, but the coin/dead-presidents? They are ALL yours, not crumbs off a rich man's table PLAYING your dumb ass).

    Working for others, selling the TRUE commodity (your time on this earth)? IS DUMB... yes, you have to for a LONG time, but eventually if you play it right? You don't. Takes time, lots of it. Good guidance, surround yourself w/ intelligent like minded folks (success BREEDS itself).

    It works. It worked for me.

    APK

    P.S.=> It worked for me & it's "Welcome home Mr. Cobb" ala the end of the film "Inception" & yes, it can work for you too (but you have to keep a TIGHT ass leash on your own nature & not be a stupid fool giving in to a mind game oriented & keeping you STUPID & POOR)... apk

    1. Re:This worked for me... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bwahaha, APK is having delusions in moms basement again.

    2. Re:This worked for me... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      APK, best post you've ever made to Slashdot. Please, more of this and less of your host-file bullshit spam.

  50. Sounds Like Google Got It's Money's Worth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So much for don't be evil.

  51. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by grumpy_old_grandpa · · Score: 1

    You just printed the recruiter job description, though. He's going to get you in the door, and maybe show you to your table. However, he's not the waiter nor the chef, and will not have much influence on the interview process, so why should he care.

  52. I call BS. by tlambert · · Score: 1

    Since companies will not give feedback on why they didn't hire you, there is no way to know why things went the way they went.

    I got declined for a job. I had a friend who worked there and told me why I was declined. I was completely off base about what I thought was going on. He said it was just one guy who was completely against me since I had given a really bad answer to a technical question he asked. The guy didn't show it at all and he it didn't even register that he had such a huge grudge against me.

    That's actually not relevant.

    When computing the interview score for the hiring committee, the top and bottom scores are thrown out.

    He could have given you a 0, and if everyone else gave you scores that average out to 3+: you're in, as far as the hiring committee goes, unless there's a huge red flag, such as lying about criminal record, education, etc..

    1. Re:I call BS. by hawguy · · Score: 2

      Since companies will not give feedback on why they didn't hire you, there is no way to know why things went the way they went.

      I got declined for a job. I had a friend who worked there and told me why I was declined. I was completely off base about what I thought was going on. He said it was just one guy who was completely against me since I had given a really bad answer to a technical question he asked. The guy didn't show it at all and he it didn't even register that he had such a huge grudge against me.

      That's actually not relevant.

      When computing the interview score for the hiring committee, the top and bottom scores are thrown out.

      He could have given you a 0, and if everyone else gave you scores that average out to 3+: you're in, as far as the hiring committee goes, unless there's a huge red flag, such as lying about criminal record, education, etc..

      Even when I worked for a company that did discard the top and bottom scores, if one person had a bad feeling about the candidate, he could persuade the rest of the team that the person is the wrong fit for the job. Unless someone steps up and defends the candidate, then he/she will likely not be hired.

    2. Re:I call BS. by war4peace · · Score: 1

      Yeah. IN THEORY.
      Good luck applying that to real world.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    3. Re:I call BS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In all that time you never learnt what the shift key was for?

    4. Re: I call BS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't hold back now, release the full power OF THE CAPSLOCK!!!

    5. Re:I call BS. by guyniraxn · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that every company adheres to this methodology?

    6. Re:I call BS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we're even more conservative. if one person dissents, the candidate is basically off the table. we make arguments for and against the candidate, so everyone understands each others opinions, but I think the team only convinced a dissenter once, from dozens of interviews

    7. Re:I call BS. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Unless it's changed in the last few years, that's not how Google works (or most tech companies, in fact). They know that it's vastly more expensive to hire a bad employee than to hire no one, so they will throw out candidates with a single strongly negative score. They have enough applicants that they can afford to do this.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    8. Re:I call BS. by tlambert · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that every company adheres to this methodology?

      I don't.

      The Article was about the Google X division in Google.
      Google adheres to this methodology.

    9. Re:I call BS. by tlambert · · Score: 1

      Unless it's changed in the last few years, that's not how Google works (or most tech companies, in fact). They know that it's vastly more expensive to hire a bad employee than to hire no one, so they will throw out candidates with a single strongly negative score. They have enough applicants that they can afford to do this.

      Everyone can have a shit day.

      Even a Google employee sent to interview someone.

      The process is intended to recognize this, and prevent it from having the effect you claim.

      Read Lazlo Bock's book (that way, you'll understand, and Lazlo will have a 5th reader).

  53. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Xoogler here.

    Back in 2007, the recruitment process was an absolute mess. You were probably first in contact with what was known as a "sourcerer" - someone who sourced leads. These passed the people they got interested over to recruiters, who were typically rather busy.

    During my interview process, the recruiter went radio silent for up to 3 weeks at a time between interviews, even when prodded via email. Until suddenly I got a new interview scheduled the next day.

    Eventually started working there. It was many great years - and the company is really rather fantastic to work for. Eventually homesickness got to me, and I decided to quit and move back home. I do have to say that it was a fantastic time. Way too much work, thousands of hours of uncompensated overtime - but at the same time - the coolest technology I've ever worked with. The experience I gained was incredible. I would've applied to join them again in a heartbeat if they set up an engineering department in my home city. :-)

  54. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by gl4ss · · Score: 2

    the problems is career management.

    you see, they think that they can get more bang for the buck from overworking the workers - even creative types, while they really don't get that.

    they just can't understand it because they don't understand what they are managing anyways - which leaves them with just ONE tool to "manage better": overwork the workers.

    that's really all there is to it, happens in most places now where you have existing workers developing something and doing a generally good job already and then you slap them with a manager who doesn't understand what the fuck he is doing at all(but has done courses on managering).

    maybe only 1 manager out of 50 of that type is good and the rest are garbage at their job - however, they wouldn't even know it because.. once again, they don't understand what the company is doing! they just know that they have x amount of underlings and they are putting in y amount of hours and their manager is then telling them to finish up the product so instead of trying to find whats wrong and why the product isn't ready already they just tell people to work more hours, come in more early and leave later - without doing as much as looking at what is stalling the development - or indeed if it is even defined what the fuck it is that should be developed.

    incidentally this is polar opposite to how management in successful cutting edge projects has been since the dawn of engineering.

    a good to the day example of this would be ea/bioware fucking up mass effect andromeda - working people to the ground on the wrong things.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  55. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by jpatters · · Score: 1

    I got declined for a job. I had a friend who worked there and told me why I was declined. I was completely off base about what I thought was going on. He said it was just one guy who was completely against me since I had given a really bad answer to a technical question he asked. The guy didn't show it at all and he it didn't even register that he had such a huge grudge against me.

    That reminds me of a company that I used to work for. The company had been acquired, and everyone was being laid off. We were all given the contents of our personnel files, and in mine was the physical copy of the resume that I had submitted when I originally applied. There was something written at the top in pen, but crossed out fairly thoroughly. Not thoroughly enough, though, because I could still make it out: "Karla doesn't like". Karla was someone that I knew from college who was also one of the people at the hiring interview. Fortunately, it didn't seem to matter that she didn't like me.

    --
    "Remember, there never were pineapple-almond cookies here."
  56. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It always amuses me how much people who have benefited from unions seem to hate them

    You know how it's normal to have weekends? Unions
    You know how you normally only have to work an 8 hour day and should get overtime pay for extra hours? Unions
    You know how you are allowed to have holidays and not get fired for it? Unions

    If you don't have those things, maybe organise a union & don't be a worse boss.

  57. Is there any truth in this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found myself questioning some of what I was reading but when I got to the bit about being force to work outdoors in 100 degree heat some serious warning bells started ringing the bullshit tune.

  58. young guy are not 60+hours productive by aepervius · · Score: 1, Informative

    Human indeed does not work that ways. See the difference in *productivity* between a software developer in Europe and one in one in the US, when you look at the quality of code developed, is almost nil over a week. That is, because in my experience, overworked 60+ hours youth/old/whomever has as much productivity when only worked 40h weeks on end. I'll compare that to bulb wattage. You can have a 40 watt lamp and leave it on for hours or have a 60 watt one and leave it on for 40.

    And don't get me started about experience. I have seen a goddamn awful code by young folk which thought they were code diva, but did not understand what the point of maintainability is. I don't care if your code use a metamorphic self compiling reflective algorithm. What I do care is that it will cost 3 time more the development code to maintain compared to normal bloody non compact code. Older developer understand that.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:young guy are not 60+hours productive by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You can have a 40 watt lamp and leave it on for hours or have a 60 watt one and leave it on for 40.

      Except dimming an incandescent doesn't extend its lifespan, like pulsing LEDs does. In fact, if you pulse LEDs, you will get more photons out of them over their lifetime, but if you dim an incandescent, you get less. (The lifespan stays about the same, but you produce less light at lower voltage...) Lamp metaphors are old, time to move up to LEDs.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:young guy are not 60+hours productive by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I think the majority of people can't do more than about 25-30 really good hours of work a week. The rest can be padded with meetings, coffee breaks, Slashdot etc. There will be a few people who can do more on a regular basis, but for the most part it just destroys your health and has a very poor ROI for the company.

      Another way to look at it is that any company which needs to get 40+ hours out of its staff is failing. It can't afford to hire enough good people to get the work done so is cracking the whip instead. Might just be one bad manager trying to look super productive, might be a sign that the whole ship is going down.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:young guy are not 60+hours productive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the most intelligent comment I have ever read on Slashdot. You are my new favorite poster.

    4. Re:young guy are not 60+hours productive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical Slashdot. Can't refute a guy's argument, so you pick apart his analogies (which are imprecise by definition).

  59. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by war4peace · · Score: 1

    Let me guess... You fucked her in college and she didn't like it? :)

    --
    ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
  60. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once was declined for, as my friend informed me, "staring at the interviewer's breasts the entire time and creeping her out".

    I'd been interviewed by a man.

  61. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Just to hear the other side of the interview table, there are TONS of LIARS out there. They have a nice resume with previous senior level positions, but can't answer simple tech questions; they can't write basic code on a whiteboard even with hand holding.

    Also, getting defensive during an interview = automatic zero.

  62. Devils in the details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Titan was an aerospace company. Google is a Internet company. One deals with the environment, the other a cooled 24hr IT facility. Titan, though was a great win to be bought by Google, didn't realize Google's success comes at solving the scale problem, scale by running 24hr to service more people and reducing cost as a side effect (really). Like typical aerospace companies, mind that any safety critical technology, when you scale, i.e. using drones/robots/autonomous vehicles.... costs actually go up for years beforehand.

    Google's theory is scale up and the costs go down. Now apply it to drones. But safety and complexity typically kills you in costs. Telsa knows this, So does Google's Waymo. Airlines know this very well, just look at your ticket price. For Google, it's theory, so one better fail fast if it doesn't work for your business.

    As an architect/developer of drone swarms, the only place you can legally test in CA is the desert. Similar to Titan, we were at EAFB, the schedule is grueling: 5am team meeting, 7am - noon flight testing, 100 deg weather, desert sand, winds, onsite debugging, testing protocol (can't "reboot the webserver" attitudes--that results in hard crashes). Then there packing/unpacking, the 2-3hr trip to/from. I found: drones are easy to demo, but drones are hard to make useful. No business wants to fly around 150K drones... They want drones at reasonable car prices (25K)--75% discount.

    I'm in my 40's and was able to handle 3-4 trips to the desert, we had a 60 yr old on my team and you can see the wear-n-tear to the point it's unhealthy, even unethical. And most of my Interns hated the schedule in the end, it was too hot and tiring.... flight testing IS grueling. I understand completely what the Titan team is going through: Pressure to push tech at the bleeding edge, meet a 9 mo schedule and keep system costs 50% less than what Boeing would price. And meeting all the same performance/repeatability that the FAA and industry accept.

    Basically, this is not about the older guy not handling the task at hand, it's about Google not understanding what it takes for flight testing--they are performing the classic case of poor crew resource management. Age was an easy metric to justify laying off the guy.

    If google thinks this is the right process for DLCs, robots, drones, i.e. safety critical tech.... they may want to lawyer up.

    1. Re:Devils in the details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software/electrical guys just don't get hardware and probably never will.

      "Hardware is hard" is a saying for a reason.

      Apple found out the hard way car manufacturing is hard.

      Google found out the hard way robotics is hard. Boston Dynamics anybody?

      The code fast, fail fast, all nighter coding marathon bullshit doesn't work in hardware. You can't rush machining steel. Or designing flight systems. Or testing flight systems for that matter. But tell that to a software guy and it's "but just work harder!" Well buddy you're welcome to try increasing the feedrate of the CNC machine, but I'm telling you it's not going to work.

    2. Re:Devils in the details by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      Google discriminated based on Age, they violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967

      Age is never a metric to justify laying off anyone.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  63. But why? And how do we fix it? by jandersen · · Score: 1

    I think it is well established by that there is a deeply ingrained bias against older employees, but I wonder why? I think in some cultures, older people are seen as much more valuable than is common in the West, as a source of experience and insight, and this was once the case in our culture as well. Now a days you're simply expected to bugger off and stop being a nuisance; something that came natural back when people would be old and worn out at around 50, but today many continue in good health well into their 60es and 70es, and could easily make a valuable contribution to society.

    As for what we can do about it - perhaps it is time for us old ones to get together and form our own businesses where you can't a job unless you have 30 - 40 years of experience. It ought to be simple to outwit and outmaneuver those quite frankly dimwitted youngsters that currently faff around in start-ups. How about that?

    1. Re:But why? And how do we fix it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tax policy partly. Which causes those weird but completely commonplace corporate splits where a worker's value goes in one pot of money but his costs (healthcare, pension, salary, air conditioning, etc) are in a different pot controlled by different evil overlords. Resulting in layoffs that strike the only productive member of a group and other absurdities.

    2. Re:But why? And how do we fix it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Class warfare. Young against old, Women against men, Foreigners against native, black against white...all the while the bankers laughing at the clueless peons.

    3. Re:But why? And how do we fix it? by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely right. United we stand; divided we fall. You don't have to play their game - particularly in today's world with all the opportunities the Internet provides you can find customers and/or patrons for your unique skills.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  64. Its a UAV project, outside by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

    So what are google supposed to do? They bought it from these guys but those same people decided to go into the UAV business. Its their choice to continue working for google.

    I am over 50 myself. I suppose most /. members are these days.

    1. Re:Its a UAV project, outside by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Speaking as someone who has actually managed and run and done field tests in a UAV project, outside (before they were fashionable), let me just say:

      So what are google supposed to do?

      Oh I don't know? How about not being cunts for a start.

      but those same people decided to go into the UAV business

      You can't spell "UAV" without "worker abuse". Oh wait, you can.

      Its their choice to continue working for google.

      Right, just because 99.995% of humans are able to be manipulated, it's their fault for being so. If they made the mistake of trusting google even slightly that they wouldn't try to recoup the moving expenses by constructive dismissal then THEY SHOULD FUCKING SUFFER!!! YEAH! Go business!

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    2. Re:Its a UAV project, outside by neo-mkrey · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself gramps, I'm 49 and holding...

  65. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt b by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sorry to hear about the deflation of your gross income

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  66. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Since companies will not give feedback on why they didn't hire you, "

    Why do we tolerate this as a society?

  67. Re:what about more workers rights like the EU? or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    what about more workers rights like the EU? or unions?

    The EU allows zero-hour contracts. These mean jobs have gone, and companies can piss you around as much as they like to avoid their legal obligations. Furthermore, the big players will now only do it through agencies to give them an extra buffer, and the agencies squeeze rates down to to the massive influx of low education, no skills former Eastern Bloc countries given a free run across the continent; who stack up 9 to a 3 bed house and live minimally - which obviously cannot be completed against when you aren't a single. And should you look farther away from the prime markets like Germany and the EU, you'll see horrendous unemployment levels, particularly for the 25 age bracket.

  68. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "the coolest technology I've ever worked with."

    Not bashing your story bro, but server farms and high-performance clusters aren't all that flash.

  69. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by jpatters · · Score: 1

    Good lord no, just a personality conflict which I was entirely oblivious to.

    --
    "Remember, there never were pineapple-almond cookies here."
  70. Boiling water? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    100 degrees is the boiling temperature of water here in Europe!

  71. Otep Shamaya said it best. by silentcoder · · Score: 0

    "Work. Buy. Consume. Die.".

    And that, right there, is why I can never be in favor of capitalism. Because human beings are not resources, because labour is a part of your LIFE, it's human beings - and human beings are worth more than that. Because the economy exists to serve the people, NOT the other way around. Because the rich should be tolerated only in so far as they are useful to the rest us - and by all the force of law prevented from stepping outside that narrow space - not celebrated, venerated or allowed to be de facto above the law.

    Whatever religion you or lack thereoff you subscribe to - the truest words in any holy book ever written is when Jesus (repeatedly) declared that the rich are evil - treat them as such. A necessary evil ? Maybe. But that's as far as it goes.

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    1. Re:Otep Shamaya said it best. by moeinvt · · Score: 2

      How do you draw a connection between "capitalism", an economic system, and the idea of certain people being above the law? Any problem with law is an issue with government, not the economic system. Even when industry is state-owned there is corruption and a double standard of justice. In the USA, I don't even think it's "de facto" anymore. Clearly, the ultra wealthy and government employees are above the law.

      I'm just frustrated that "capitalism" seems to have become the catch-all term for every injustice in our society. Wealth and income inequality will always exist(unless we are all equally in a state of squalor) but the current degree of wealth inequality is not a result of "capitalism". It is the result of government granting special economic and legal privileges to a favored elite.

      If you want to look for the root of economic injustice in our society, forget about taxes, government spending, minimum wage laws, etc. Start researching the monetary and banking system. The people in our society who get wealthy by actually producing things and providing valuable services aren't necessarily the bad guys. The parasites who accumulate wealth by shuffling money around and playing financial games while providing very few real services are the evil ones. A trillion dollar banker bailout isn't "capitalism" and I would argue that capitalism doesn't even exist when we have a small group of banker scumbags who are allowed to arbitrarily set interest rates.

      Recall that Jesus threw the bankers(money changers?) out of the temple, and note the many scriptures condemning the practice of usury.

    2. Re:Otep Shamaya said it best. by silentcoder · · Score: 2

      >How do you draw a connection between "capitalism", an economic system, and the idea of certain people being above the law?
      It's an inevitable outcome of capitalism that money buys power, so power concentrates in the rich - including the power to buy immunity from the law. If I poison a town's drinking water I would get the death penalty for terrorism. If a corporation does it they may get sued, and probably won't because they can afford an army of lawyers. Even if they get a fine, it will be for far less than the money they made killing people.

      >Any problem with law is an issue with government, not the economic system.
      You're an idiot. These two things are always related, neither can exist without the other. No I don't care what you read in whatever ANCAP manifesto, it's fundamentally impossible for one to exist without the other and without constant influence on the other. They are two sides of the same coin. Of course capitalists CLAIM otherwise, it's the best way to deflect any and all criticism of their preferred way of organizing resource distribution (that's all an economy is) onto government and away from the system or the rich. It is, however, flagrant and obvious bullshit.

      >Even when industry is state-owned there is corruption and a double standard of justice.
      Yes. What's your point ? Nowhere in my post will you find any suggestion that I favor state-ownership of anything. Just because I'm opposed to capitalism doesn't mean I'm in favor of communism. There are more than two ways to distribute resources, in fact there are thousands - the two you know are the worst two - and no, neither is better -they are equally horrible with essentially identical outcomes.

      >Clearly, the ultra wealthy and government employees are above the law.
      Both of which are caused by capitalism and the existence of the ultra-wealthy in the first place. To GET above the law, the ultra-wealthy has to buy loopholes in the law, which is automatically available to the government employees they bought it from afterward. More importantly, there really isn't much difference between the two. There's practically a revolving door between the capitol and the most crooked banks of wall street. The Trump cabinet has more ex Goldman Sachs employees than ANY OTHER SOURCE - even the government and the military. He's not unique in this, Obama and Bush II both had several of their species in their cabinets, but he did take it to a new level. There are more of them than ever before.

      >I'm just frustrated that "capitalism" seems to have become the catch-all term for every injustice in our society
      I didn't say this in a discussion on EVERY injustice in society - I said it in a discussion on labor abuse, and my post was focused on the problem of approaching labor policy from a capitalist perspective which makes humans just another resource in the economy - as opposed to their proper place in an economy: the RECIPIENTS of resources, and about an event in a private company that is all too sadly common and representative. Of course, it's not as bad as it once were, labour laws and standards over the years have improved things a bit, but the fact that - even 200 years later, this shit still happens, shows just how perniciously it is a result of the very concept of "human resources" which is utterly ingrained into capitalism (where EVERYTHING is a market resource). Unions did a lot to make it better. The law did more and made it even better. Sure we no longer kill 90% of our children before age 10 by literally working them to death in factories as was the case in 19th century England... and yet this shit still happens. Because capitalism reduces us to "work. buy. consume. die" - mere resources in the market until we're dead.

      > The people in our society who get wealthy by actually producing things and providing valuable services aren't necessarily the bad guys
      Of course not. Their called "workers". But the people who own their companies - they are almost always and entirely bad guys. It's not that big

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  72. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by silentcoder · · Score: 1

    Translation: He couldn't find the clitoris AND he didn't call her after. :P

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  73. Re:Google is just following MS benchmark by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 1

    Embrace the company by buying it
    Extend the hours of the employees of that company without compensation
    Extinguish them as they leave or die off.

    Google are merely following the Microsoft benchmark we all know and love so well.

    --
    I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
  74. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by symes · · Score: 1

    I will always give feedback when asked - but most of the time that is (honestly) because someone was better suited to the role. Just because you don't get a job doesn't always mean you created a bad impression. The worst thing about hiring, for me at least, is interviewing a bunch of great people, all of whom I could work with, and only choosing one or two to employ.

  75. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt bi by Type44Q · · Score: 1

    You don't understand women very well, do you? If you don't find her clit, it'll annoy her a bit (they're quite used to that); it's if you're able to get her off repeatedly and then you blow her off... omg, are you scorned: the saying is not "Hell hath no fury like a woman frustrated."

  76. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt b by Type44Q · · Score: 1

    Typo; that should have read "omg, are you fucked."

  77. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt bi by silentcoder · · Score: 1

    Brazilians refer to a woman who is rude to strangers or others terrible to deal with as a "badly eaten bitch". It's mostly an insult used by other women. The implication being that the sexual frustration of having your pussy eaten by somebody who is so bad at it that you don't get off - would make somebody far grumpier than just not getting any.

    Now considering that the average Brazilian has sex three times as often as the average American -I daresay they know more about the topic than you do.

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  78. Re:what about more workers rights like the EU? or by houghi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or both, but Unions, not Guilds like they seem to have in the US. Those are there to protect the jobs, Unions are there to protect the people and no, that is not the same. They are overlapping.

    Just talking about Belgium, so details might differ from country to country.
    Unions saw to it that we have much stronger working rights. They are Unions and not a guild. With a guild (e.g. writers guild) you protect just one function. e.g. writers guild or bakers in the middle ages or beer brewers.
    With a union, they look at the people, regardless if they are a writer or a baker or whatever.

    In Belgium I can join any of several Unions. There are some that are specific for certain branches, like e.g. for train personal or for military, but even then you will have an option to join them, or another.

    I can go to almost any union and join. And nobody cares. Really, they don't. I have been on both sides and nobody asks if you are Union or not You will have the same identical rights.
    When a company is larger that 49 people, a union representative must be available, so social elections are held. So this means that every company with more that 50 employees is, in fact, a Union company. This means some monthly meetings and such. This does NOT mean you must join a union.

    If you work in a company with less than 50 people, you can still join a Union, if you like. Or you don't. All up to you. Nobody will realy ask for it as there is no difference and you can join or leave at any m

    The Unions saw to it that working in heat is illegal. At a certain duration, they need to see that drinks (water is fine) is available. If it takles longer, working hours need to be shorter (without loss of pay) and at even higher temperatures, they will need to close altogether.

    So in Belgium, if this where the case, any person could contact their union who could start an investigation. "But what if I am not a union member at that moment?" Thenb you become one and they will be available from that moment on.
    "How do you know that?" Because I have seen it in action.
    37 hour week? No unpaid overtime? 35 days holidays? 8EUR extra per working day for food? Paid public transport? Extra insurance? Increase in pay with index so no negotiations need to be done? All done thanks to Unions.

    I know many will now start to defend the companies and tell how bad of an idea all this is. There is no need for that. The companies have their own lawyers that are capable of defending themselves.
    And because they are a Union and not a guild, they will understand that the companies need to make money to keep as many people at work as possible and not just at one company or in one profession.

    Are they perfect? No. Are they better than nothing? Ask the people who started and fought for them.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  79. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's not a grudge. You failed a technical test. You were wrong.

  80. News flash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Workers are slaves and we work in a country for owners!

  81. i hate stupid tech Qs not relavent by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    You know, id like to see these interviewers try a job interview for a change, its not that easy, you can make mistakes, since you are in a new environment and nervous.

    Get a grip interviewers, dont be so harsh, dont be such assholes with stupid questions.

    You know we dont have the internet in our heads, and can answer any query faster than google.

    Some people might be technically correct, but are assholes, wouldnt have your back, and would throw you under the bus anytime, thats not a person I would hire.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  82. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nobody wants to hire in someone who may advance to be their future boss. People can be spiteful and the corporate world draws those people like flies. The communication you received from the company was calculated to insult you. They specifically targeted a strength of yours. Nothing thrills such people as much as using position to abuse someone they sense is more capable than themselves. What you describe is common.

  83. 20 is that all..... by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    25+ here.

    I still fail to see what you have said.

    1> claim your a big shot, declare some facts to proove it.
    2> declare the person an idiot, having a small sample size in survey, (when watching Silicon Valley, Office Space, IT Crowd is enough one needs.)

    .

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:20 is that all..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently it's not the job experience you lack - it's reading comprehension taught in 4th grade. He was saying hiring is not done by some committee giving scores to people, and people who think the most negative and most positive interviewer opinions have theirs tossed out - people who think that are morons. Morons like you.

    2. Re:20 is that all..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh look, making fun of a dumbass attracks his kin. except nerds are supposed to be smart - these fofos are just unattractive and antisocial.

      some moron says hiring is done by a committee giving number scores to people, and top and bottom "scores" (whatever that means) are ignored. maybe this is true in comedy tv shows. thankfully, unlike you two, we don't live in a tv show. the reality, as backed up by my big dick, is the exact opposite on all of those points. no committee, and a person on the existing team being strongly against you has great weight - the opposite of being ignored. If you, with your 25+ years of loading full tapes in a box think otherwise, you've clearly been loading tapes in a box.

      1) i gave examples of my ample industry experience, then made a point that hiring is not done this way Ever, backed up by my experience
      2) I declared the person an idiot, because clearly like you, he knows zero about the industry and gets his opinion from tv comedies.

      you, I'm calling an idiot because you can't parse and comprehend a simple paragraph of english. gonna go out on a limb here and say you are a bit on the ugly side and have social anxiety disorder, and are someone whom I often stuffed inside a locker in my mid-teens. and now you put tapes in a box.

  84. Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How's "do no evil" working out for you?

  85. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd been interviewed by a man.

    ...who was identifying as a woman...

  86. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt b by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My kingdom for some mod points!

  87. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whats the -1 mod for, inconvenient truth? All those facts are true look them up.

  88. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt bi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the French say about such women that she was "badly fucked" (mal baisee -- sounds like ma-l-bay-zay) and that's why she is in a bad mood or even pissed

    captcha: crotch Lol

  89. Said the UNIDENTIFIABLE projectionist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject/learn to read (it's in my post u replied to so "courageously" (not) unidentifiable troll)): I run my own business & own my home.

    APK

    P.S.=> Losers like you make me laugh... apk

  90. Google hit pieces are coming in floods from WSJ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WSJ Overlords are sending their subsidiary after Google next. It is getting Trump treatment. Expect non-stop bad press for next few weeks as they try to force advertisers off of Google platforms and products.

  91. Re:Boofuckinghoo... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He *did* try to get a desk job. You can read it for yourself in the article.

  92. Re:I was recruited for a dev position and felt bia by chispito · · Score: 1

    Since companies will not give feedback on why they didn't hire you, there is no way to know why things went the way they went.

    If you go through a contracting agency, you get feedback, because the agency needs the feedback so they can select a better candidate. You may not like this arrangement for other reasons, but it is possible to get feedback.

    --
    The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
  93. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by RubberDogBone · · Score: 2

    They COULD work 60-hour weeks and live off Mountain Dew and sleep under their desks like good little drone employees and accept low salaries in lieu of how it looks on a resume, but the older, experienced workers know that lifestyle is bullshit and won't do it.

    So the companies don't want them.

    I'm an older tech worker trying to find a job, and even when I bury my experience and try for entry level stuff, they imply they pretty much want people who will marry the job, eat, sleep, and live for work, and not ask for much compensation. And I can't do that. I don't WANT to do that. I already know it does nothing but burn out people, whereupon the company just replaces them with new ones. It does nothing for the individual.

    The last job I actually nailed and got right away was working in a McDonalds. They just wanted workers, not drones.

    --
    Sig for hire.
  94. One older guy, in his mid-50s by hoggoth · · Score: 1

    > One older guy, in his mid-50s

    *sigh*
    I'm in my mid-50s and I rock-climb, lift weights, run and am the same weight I was in high school. I could probably beat you in a 5K.

    --
    - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
  95. It's all the telephone game.... by gosand · · Score: 1

    One of the parts I really dislike about hiring is that we have to go through Recruiters/HR when dealing with candidates.
    I don't even know if they communicate with candidates at all. I always ask that they let candidates know when I decide not to hire them and give them feedback. But I found out once, when I ran into a candidate later, that they didn't. They just got no response at all after the interview. Which sucks for everyone involved, and makes the company look bad. But HR/Recruiters don't care. They really don't.

    So when you talk about "the company" you mean the face of the company to the candidates.

    But to your point, and interviewer may give feedback to the hiring manager to gives it to the recruiter who gives it to the candidate. By the time it gets to the candidate, if at all, it most likely isn't the original information. I have been that candidate too... and it does really suck to think you nailed it and you never hear anything back. On the flip side, I have gotten resumes that were ok, but 2 minutes into the phone screen knew the person was a NO. My feedback to the recruiter was specific and definite...and while we were talking, he got an email from the candidate saying the phone screen went well. Sometimes, your perspectives are just completely different.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  96. Rampant Age Discrmination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife and I recently took my next door neighbor out for his 40th birthday. At about 10PM while we were out, his cell phone rang and it was his work. They wanted him to come in right away for something, but he'd been drinking and said he'd take care of it in the morning.

    The next day, he was fired for "underperformance" and "insubordination," despite having been given permission by his boss to take his 40th birthday off.

    So they called him during an approved vacation at 10 o'clock at night on his 40th birthday and fired him for not coming into the office.

  97. Stupid story. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

    There are people doing real, actual hard labor who wake up and find they can't do it anymore, where are the stories about them? Oh, but this is 'Google' so we're supposed to care?

    You work to provide value to your employer, when you cease to do so your job is in jeopardy. And we always hear about the "bad" side of this but what about whoever got that job? They are probably pretty happy about it.

    Converse of this story:

    My name is Bryce McMillenial, I'm 32 and I've been looking for work forever. I'm young, healthy, and don't have a family so I really want somewhere I can work hard and have a chance at advancement. I recently found an opening at Google X working with drones, it's amazing!

  98. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This sounds horrible, and it is, but come on, how alarmist can we be? Workers in every industry face potential changes in job duties and locations. If your situation is that bad, and changes in management, practices, location, or duties really make your job unsuitable for you, find another one. Yes, it sucks if some giant company buys your company and says your only option (within the company) is to move elsewhere and perhaps do something you hate, but you still have the option of NOT relocating and NOT working for them. The summary makes it sound like Google kills employees of other companies for sport. Maybe if you're old or aging, not in the best shape, and don't want to work outside in the elements, you should refuse.

    Changing employers sucks, but if your job drastically changes anyway and you can't handle it, you might as well.

  99. This is the lesson if Google buys your company... by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

    If Google buys your company - take a cash buy-out. Once Google owns your technology - they are going to do with it what they want to anyway. No use you hanging around for that.

    Do not stay on-board because you have better things to do - like start your next business, retire to a sailboat in the Caribbean, or pursue other interests (do you like to write? Write a book and put it up on Kindle.) People put so many limits on themselves; they really need to expand their comfort zone.

    As for Age Discrimination: that is real and should be dealt with if found in a company. Hypocritical for a company that supposedly supports diversity. Everyone should be interested in combating this because we are all going to get old one day, assuming we don't die first.

    --

    Lodragan Draoidh
    The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  100. Just A Guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    My guess was that you were already identified for layoff by the time your site director made their comments. This is pretty common; management keeps bad news about layoffs under wraps until they have a plan. They don't want people bailing out on them "prematurely" and they want to keep control. The fact that the site director suggested there was a way to save your jobs was likely one of the following:

    1). A coward's choice (introduce the subject as a possibility when it is an inevitability);
    2). A way to squeeze you for one final product release;
    3). A 'faint hope' comment;
    4). Maybe the site director actually believed there was a way out. Most people prefer good news and optimism, sometimes to the point of discounting reality. It could even be that the site director wasn't actually in control and wasn't fully informed. Who knows?

    Best thing you can do is learn from the experience. Would you sacrifice like that again, given the same set of circumstances? I'm betting on No.

  101. Anti-Government Rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, when I read your post, at first it sounds reasonable. You should not reward bad or incompetent behavior, it's simple.

    Then I read the subject line. And the parent post. And next I notice that your comments only seem to apply to government and not the private sector. Which, if you had a point, should also apply to the private sector. If a corporation is bad or incompetent, you should not reward that either.

    And that's when the wheels fall off. You are just another anti-government ranter; everything the government does is bad or wrong, by definition. You don't judge performance, you've pre-judged the system.

    Every developed country has a national health system, paid for by tax dollars. That's the government, for those keeping track. The only exception is the US, which has the most expensive healthcare on Earth and gets mediocre scores on longevity, health, satisfaction, bang for buck spent, and every clinical indicator you can shake a stick at.

    So you can take your anti government rant and stick it where the sun don't shine. Your beloved private sector solutions don't deliver the goods and neither do you.

  102. Brainless conclusions of a simple mind by JohnMcLane · · Score: 1

    "Some people claimed it was bias against older workers and veterans." Of course not! Google stretch its tentacles way further than anyone really knows. They probably bought this company to make way for some other "partner" or because they, the real owners of Google, saw it as a threat. There are many "roads to rome" but most are in reality owned by the same old banker #$ers. Monopoly rules, and no one is the wiser... well almost no one.

  103. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt b by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The hiring manager, he couldn't get enough of it.

  104. Re: I was recruited for a dev position and felt bi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google actually spends serious R&D money.

    I know of one project that would be a game changer, if it worked. I hope they continue with it, it's revolutionary.

  105. This Just In... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tech companies are run by sociopaths.

    Also, water is wet.

  106. Every Good Job I Got Was Through Friends by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

    If you want to be successful at getting your foot in the door of a traditional company - try talking about your desire to find a job with your friends and family. With luck and the right contacts you can get in by someone inside vouching for you.

    The very first adult job I acquired out of high school was working in a lamp store (lamp repairs and lamp creation from parts, heavy lifting and unboxing and boxing for delivery, lamp installation for display in store, sales and register, and cleanup). I got the job through my girlfriend at the time, who's parent's CPA worked for the owner who just so happened to be opening a new store. I got the job the day of the interview because they all vouched for me.

    My current job (career - 20+ years on the job) was through a college friend who already worked at the company. I had the right skill set they needed, at the right time - they were scaling their operations, and he vouched for me - which gave me added points over my competition. This all through a short conversation I had with him about my need to find a job (the student loans and credit cards were maxed out and I was worried about how to make the next month's payments).

    In some ways, I think if you are open to it and can communicate with others, the universe will provide. And don't get me wrong, there were times when I had to take the burger flipping type jobs in a pinch - but I always saw those things as stepping stones to something better. It's all about your attitude regardless of the slings and arrows of misfortune thrown your way.

    --

    Lodragan Draoidh
    The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  107. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by EmptyHead · · Score: 1

    Republicans? Even the Unions went for trump, that's how he got the rust belt. The libs are much scarier with their desire to off-shore or import labor instead of supporting fair salaries. Both sides are badly broken, lets hope Trump at least helps the H-1B issue before he gives up on campaign promises.

  108. Re:Google buys companies to get young, hard workin by starblazer · · Score: 1

    Well... Let's See about that... Oh wait, I'm having trouble finding support for him. Oh wait, I found this Wikipedia page So, the police and firefighters unions. That's it.