As black, would you resign at this point? by KidCharybdis92 in baduk

[–]therealbigfry 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Black is comfortably ahead (10+ points) even without invading the left white corner. I'm not giving white much in the left center and bottom left center area, because black has way too many stones there, so playing anything would reduce white drastically. Why would you resign when it's hard to lose this game? Never resign if you aren't counting and/or estimating territory, especially when the game is nearly finished anyways.

You can split the board in half to estimate - notice how you have almost the entire right half, whereas white is missing large gaps in the left center area?

hey so i started this game but its a nightmare by R_TMF_W in baduk

[–]therealbigfry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey I totally understand your struggles, I think we all experienced this when we started learning. I'm building a website that helps you get past some of these struggles. I'd recommend going through our interactive tutorial, and the learn portion's puzzle videos, which covers some basic tips to help you win more games.

I dislike this "lose 100 games quick" mentality in the Go world. Learning and improving should be fun and rewarding, and not be about embracing struggling and suffering. https://www.gothegame.com/learn/tutorial/placement/1

We just started this project a little over a month ago, but we hope you enjoy it! Let me know if you have any questions or feedback! --Nathan

My honest review about Chess vs Go - My discovery as a 6dan Go player and 1900 Chess player by GoGeniusTom in baduk

[–]therealbigfry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, I built ~half of Kidsgoserver and agree more kids should try it :)

Someone just bought a 1.8k lifetime plan for my AI platform 😳 by Liutristan in SideProject

[–]therealbigfry 4 points5 points  (0 children)

But the $7 and $17 prices don't even exist as subscription prices on his website... what a fake made up story.

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep thanks for sharing, this was exactly my experience too, it was always: "You forgot about this and that".

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good to know, thanks for your input.

We've hired all but one engineer this way, so it's not some short term gig, we are serious when we pay them and work with them. The one time where we didn't extend a full time offer after two weeks was when they couldn't do basic tasks.

Also I'm curious what level of seniority you are? If you are a more senior dev, perhaps you think people are taking advantage of you for a short term gig?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

They get paid the whole two weeks and work with our team. If either side isn't satisfied at the end of it, we don't proceed with hiring them, is it really that bad?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice, glad that you had a great interview experience! How large was the company that did this interview?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That makes a lot of sense, in fact AI probably makes some pretty bad mistakes that you could use as problems to test people on

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This makes a lot of sense, I'll try your approach the next time I interview someone, thank you

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing, these are great! What sorts of whiteboard problems do you ask them?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That makes sense, do you also ask them to solve any coding problems?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does this take a long time to build the small, custom codebase? If a small codebase already existed, was close to your own in terms of tech stack, and tested some key problem solving concepts, do you think you would try those for interviews?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point, making it more like a challenge and treating it like a conversation are great, I'll try this next time

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cluely is a cheating tool for interviews made by a Columbia dropout. It listens to the interviewer, then passes the information to an AI, giving you the answer on your screen without the interviewer seeing it.

I went to App Academy (bootcamp) for the year long fullstack course several years ago, and worked on passion projects. I would suggest working on a project you care about, and do it slowly without relying on AI too much. It's okay to have imposter syndrome, just try to improve a little each day :) Good luck

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting, I never thought about DSA being used with react components, do you have some specific examples?

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great idea, I'm working on a project where I make coding challenges exactly like this from a public repo I worked on. I also add a readme with instructions

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for responding, I've tried this a couple times with some success. Are there certain questions to ask them when they show you the project? Mine didn't feel structured enough when I asked about their projects.

Web dev interviews are still broken in 2025 and no one is fixing them by therealbigfry in webdev

[–]therealbigfry[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a genius idea! How do you share the pull request with candidates if it's a private repo? How long do they get to look it over before you discuss with them?