02-24-2011 12:52 PM
I was asked to interview someone once and when I received their resume I knew I was in for some fun. In a single page resume the person wrote LabView, labview, LABview and one or two other variations. They never used the correct selling. The resume tried to claim they were very knowledgeable in LabVIEW and after the first question I knew they had very limited exposure to it.
One piece of advise though is to always be honest in an interview. This is true for any subject matter, not just LabVIEW. I generally don't tell someone right away what my experiece is because I like to see if they are being honest about their experience. If they think I may not be very experienced it is easy to tell if someone is inflating their experience. Any good interviewer will know if you are trying to con them so it is best to just be honest.
02-24-2011 02:21 PM
As a contractor/consultant I get interviewed often, and they range from fairly limited, when they apparently are sufficiently in awe of my experience (or know that they don't know enough LabVIEW to be able to quiz me), up to actually sitting down at a computer and working on code, as with my current project/customer. I second the comment about not inflating your ability, you can usually be caught by someone who is knowlegeable and it will show up pretty fast if you actually get the job.
As an earlier post said, brush up on the terminology, note down the types of instruments you may have used and the communications protocols they required. It is amazing how blank my mind goes when asked a simple question like that, and I interview sometimes three times a year.
03-01-2011 12:27 PM
@PaulG. wrote:
One of the better companies I worked for had a written test as part of my interview. Mostly associate developer-level stuff.
Another company simply asked "do you know LabVIEW"? I said "yes". That was it.
My experience was more along the lines of
"Do you know LabVIEW?"
"No, never heard of it, but I can learn it"
Been here for three years.
02-20-2012 11:50 PM
Hi,
I agreed with you. Any way, your points of view make me thinking about some thing for my project.
Pls try to keep posting. Tks and best regards
02-29-2012 10:12 AM
Thanks for your link. It's useful for our community.
Same material can be found at: Application engineer interview questions
I hope it's useful for you and you like it. Please continue sharing more information at this topic.
Best rgs!
02-29-2012 04:36 PM
I have also brought in code on a thumbdrive to show what I have programmed previously. I would just make sure it is your own code that you are showing them.