@fred_thompson Yeah, it’s true. Lots of things are still in the past over there. Like taking your card away from your table to charge you meal at a restaurant then using your signature to prove it is your actual card.
@fred_thompson I’ve forgotten, how do you even use a cheque. Do you have to go into a branch to cash it? Do you spend £10 taking the train into town to cash a £35 cheque hahahaha?
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Hello !
I am Ritik Agarwal, working as a SDE at Amazon UK from past 7 months. Amidst the tech layoffs, I am also potentially impacted and in my consultation period, and therefore looking for, visa sponsored Software/ML jobs in the UK .
#layoffs#london#uk#softwareengineering
@KevinNaughtonJr OMG this is so true. I suppose you now get questions like, “Kevin I was searching for this on Google yesterday why couldn’t I find it?”
@kenniscotz@KevinNaughtonJr Oncall can be a bit scary the first time because you can feel that you only have to solve that major incident but many times being oncall is sometimes about just escalating the incident to the person with the domain knowledge of that area if you are unable to fix it yourself.
@kenniscotz@KevinNaughtonJr Oncall normally means that you are available to provide support to major user impacting incidents, eg users cannot access a service, usually outside of normal office hours. If the issue is low user impacting it’s normally deferred to the next day for regular support.