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> In general, people are completely uninterested in experience that they don't understand...

It depends on the interviewer. I have colleagues who are risk averse. They want to stick with the tried and true. I on the other hand am a bit of risk taker. If you told me about something that I knew nothing about, and it was a legitimate way to improve things, you will have peaked my curiosity. I would immediately want to know more.

Also, it helps if the hiring person is an experienced dev. In my org, managers do not participate in the hiring of developers, other than background checks and verifying references.



One of the other things that I was thinking of was the notion of humility and curiosity. For me personally, I like to brainstorm and improv a bit and then shrink down to a proper design or method. This type of process is extremely difficult to communicate in an interview if the interviewer is either not curious or doesn't possess humility or both.


The idiom uses "piqued".


For all intensive porpoises it's the same word. Just spelt different.


Damn, I read that, and thought “something is wrong with it, but at least they didn’t write ‘peeked’” thanks for reminding me of the correct one.




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