u/Fakkle

Sim deactivated/expired message pero may net pa

Nakakareceive pa ng text at may signal pa smart sim ko pero its been 6 days na nagnotify na expired na, hindi na din pwedeng iload pero gumagana pa *123#.

Pwede pang mag sim replacement? Naka link number ko sa gcash pero currently talking to cs para palitan acc number ko/transfer funds etc sa ibang account

reddit.com
u/Fakkle — 2 days ago
▲ 24 r/SaaS

Tracked how much engg time we spent interviewing one developer role. The number surprised me

We opened a backend developer role in March. Pretty normal process. Job post, inbound resumes, a few recruiter referrals. Nothing unusual

One night after putting my kids to bed I started a messy spreadsheet. I was curious how much time we actually spent evaluating candidates. Not just interviews. Prep, notes, everything

Total applicants: 140. Resume screen left 22. We ran 14 technical interviews. Six of those moved to a second round. Each technical interview took about 75 minutes total. 15 mins prep. 40min call. 20mins writing feedback

When I added it up the number looked wrong. 31 engineering hours in two weeks. Basically four full workdays just figuring out if people could read code and debug things

We tried a few ways to reduce it. HackerRank style tests filtered poorly. Good engineers often refused them. Others optimized solutions in weird ways. Take homes had a different issue. Low completion and painful review time. Pair programming worked best signal wise but burned even more hours

Eventually we tested a “watch them work” step before interviews. Short 30-45 min byte-sized tasks inside a live prod-environment system. Things like debugging a broken API or fixing infra issues

We tried Utkrusht for this since it runs the environment and records the session

The big change was who we spent time on. Instead of interviewing fourteen people we watched recordings and interviewed four. First round screening time dropped from about 30hours to like maybe 2. Mostly reviewing the best sessions

The lesson for me had nothing to do with tools. It was measuring the process and checking the right signals

Hiring pipelines grow accidentally. When you finally put numbers on each step you realize how expensive some habits are

u/Fakkle — 8 days ago