Archive

Archive for February, 2009

419 Scammer Sends Application Form

February 27th, 2009 Patrick No comments

As I’ve been detailing on the previous post regarding this scam, I’ve been in contact with a 419 scammer who is using CraigsList to try to scam folks to send him a deposit on a rental that he doesn’t own and doesn’t know anything about.

A little bit ago, he sent along the application form, which was a bitmap file, not a DOC or PDF. Crazy. I’m attaching it as a jpeg here.
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419 Scammer Sends Application Form
Categories: General Tags:

Kings Of Leon – Sex On Fire

February 26th, 2009 Patrick No comments

The wife likes this song a lot – she just bought it from iTunes. So I am checking it out.
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Kings Of Leon – Sex On Fire
Categories: General Tags:

Siftables

February 26th, 2009 Patrick No comments

Hands down this has to be the coolest toy ever. But it’s not exactly a toy – it’s an advanced wireless mesh that you can interact with.

I don’t know when they are going to start selling these, but I’ll be first in line to buy one for me our kids.

Siftables
Categories: General Tags:

419 Scammers Have New Scam UPDATED

February 26th, 2009 Patrick 1 comment

LAST UPDATE 03/04/09 – 12:00pm

This may not be that new of a scam, but it’s definitely new to me. Our old favorite “Nigerian 419 Scammers” are now posting listings for rentals on CraigsList for properties they don’t own and have never seen. It’s an interesting use of the Internet, but still the same basic scam we’ve seen for years.

Here’s how it goes:
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419 Scammers Have New Scam UPDATED
Categories: 419 eaters, General, scammers Tags:

A View On Interviews

February 25th, 2009 Patrick No comments

I got an email from a recruiter friend asking me to look at a list of questions they were using to screen potential mid-level .NET web developers. Most of the stuff was pretty standard stuff about controls, XML and the like. He wanted to know whether the list of questions was something that a developer should know or if it was too textbook-like.

I’ve experienced questions like these in phone interviews. I had a phone screen where the person quizzed me about the internals of the .NET Garbage Collector. 7 of the 10 questions were pretty standards ones that any competent .NET programmer should be able to recall. The other questions were really obscure and were only intended to find out how deep and how frequently I went into the internals of the framework.

But, that interview and those questions only proved that I could memorize something or that I had used that particular subset of the framework. It did not give the company any indication as to whether I could write reliable, secure, bug-free code. It did not tell the company whether I could take a business requirement, analyze it and produce a solution.

I tend to think that the language used is really just an implement for a talented coder. By that, I mean that I prefer hearing how someone would solve a generic problem rather than list of things a quick Google/MSDN search would yield for them. In our field, there is so much information out there that it’s hard to keep up with it. I prefer people who write strong code and strong algorithms and who can figure out complex problems rather than someone who can regurgitate the .NET Framework. Whenever I interview developers, I do throw 2 or 3 basic .NET fundamentals questions at them to set a baseline, but then I try to engage them in a discussion of how they have actually used those parts of the framework. What problem were they trying to solve? What were the business requirements? Being a strong developer these days is more about business value than anything else.

A View On Interviews
Categories: General Tags:

Ghost Car

February 14th, 2009 Patrick No comments

I totally hate when this happens.

Ghost Car
Categories: General Tags:

System.Net.Mail Pickup Directory

February 5th, 2009 Patrick No comments

I’m putting this here mostly for myself cause I have a habit of forgetting these things. But, if you are in development and want to avoid actually sending emails (or don’t have access to an SMTP server), you can tell System.Net.Mail to just drop the MailMessage in a folder by using this code in your app.config/web.config:

System.Net.Mail Pickup Directory
Categories: General Tags:

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