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this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2026
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Showerthoughts
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A "Showerthought" is a simple term used to describe the thoughts that pop into your head while you're doing everyday things like taking a shower, driving, or just daydreaming. The most popular seem to be lighthearted clever little truths, hidden in daily life.
Here are some examples to inspire your own showerthoughts:
- Both “200” and “160” are 2 minutes in microwave math
- When you’re a kid, you don’t realize you’re also watching your mom and dad grow up.
- More dreams have been destroyed by alarm clocks than anything else
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- A good place for politics is c/politicaldiscussion
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If you made it this far, showerthoughts is accepting new mods. This community is generally tame so its not a lot of work, but having a few more mods would help reports get addressed a little sooner.
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Had an interview at a company. They asked me to do a coding challenge. Solve it without AI. The task was written in AI and requirements all over the place. Took me 6hrs+. I sent it and they wanted to see me in person. Took half a day off to make to the interview. Meeting went well. They call me and tell me my assignment was not what they expected.
There should be a hefty fine for this behavoiur.
What did they mean by not what they expected? Like they didn't expect you to solve it, or didn't expect the AI to give you an assignment?
They mean they are lying to the applicant's face, gaslighting them.
What they did was the equivalent of contracting out a coder to engineer some software for them, without paying them for it.
The job market itself is a fraud, a scam.
Saying 'its not what we expected' is simply what they are legally required to do in order to be able to frame the entire thing such that they can't be sued for getting useful labor while giving no compensation.
Its a framing device, frame it as a job interview. Its 'oh your test performance was not satisfactory', written on some kind of document somewhere. The actual point is to get free software engineering services.
Its a scam.
Think about if you tried to do this with physical, mechanical engineering or architecture: here, draw up some plans for this device or this part of a building... oh, we're sorry, that's not satisfactory... but anything you submitted during the job interview, thats the intellectual property of the company now.
You can also scam the job market itself by simply coordinating with a market research firm, have a set of companies issue an array of 'job openings' that are not real job openings, what they actually are is a way to do a survey of the job market itself.
Its all a complete fucking joke at this point.
Also, a metric companies report on, and then those reports get amalgamated into broad economic data... is just literally 'how many job openings did we post'.
So, if you wanna look like you are a growing company, for extremely little cost... just post fake job openings, that you'll never hire for.
Have 1/3 or so of all job openings by all companies look like this, idiot 'economists' who can't figure out what is actually going on, look at the aggregate numbers and conclude the economy is growing 1/3 faster than it is.
And there's also the classic 'we want to do an internal promotion, but for legal reasons we need to pretend its a competetive search through the whole job market, so here's a bunch of fake job openings where everyone other than our internal person will be unsatisfactory'.
Recruiters and HR know all this shit, they do it regularly, and they're usually not very keen to tell you about it.
They're all scum, as low and contemptible as a scammy car loan/lease salesman, or a 'date the rate marry the home' used house salesman.
Kinda reminds me of a course that I took from Google, regarding IT. To earn my certification, I had to complete assorted challenges...but the assignments had broken links, or not compatible with my browser (Firefox). Sure, I am supposedly certified, but I was doing weird workarounds to earn it, which sometimes allowed me to skip parts of the online testing.
It is stupid, and I refuse to believe that I am actually qualified to be "Google IT Support".
I would say that solving the problem in the way you did makes you well or over qualified, lol.
'Wait, all of this is stupid!'
That guy/gal. You want them, that one, the one with the capacity to think outside of the box, within the specific technical realm of the job.
But, we live in a world run by MBA's with extremely fragile egos, so, we get insane nonsense instead, where every business process is basically built around making incompetent idiots feel smart.