My old Compuserve address was 76713,1410 ....I can't believe I remember that.
Anywho, this is a really dumb argument....if you want to hire AOL users to work in your IT department, just be prepared to have tickets with "me too" entered as the comment.
If you want to hire hotmail users, be prepared to have "lulz! epic winz, !!11! ftw" in your tickets.
You are confusing the issue....yahoo, gmail, etc, are fine.
Hotmail is the late 2000s version of AOL. It means "I'm a newb, and I can't separate social networking with email."
mac.com means "I am a newb, and this computer is pretty."
Your email address says a lot about you....almost as much as a proper cover letter (or lack thereof).
Nah. It is a pretty powerful service bundle. It just means that the owner of the email address hasn't yet realized they can receive pretty much all of the same services for free elsewhere, or chooses not to.
IEEE is using SendMail. I suppose that is geeky enough.I'll stick with my @ieee.org alias. Then you don't need to know who I'm actually using (although when I reply you'll find out).
i wonder what my @amsat.org and my @ieee.org say about me.You are confusing the issue....yahoo, gmail, etc, are fine.
Hotmail is the late 2000s version of AOL. It means "I'm a newb, and I can't separate social networking with email."
mac.com means "I am a newb, and this computer is pretty."
Your email address says a lot about you....almost as much as a proper cover letter (or lack thereof).
i wonder what my @amsat.org and my @ieee.org say about me.
BTW they both forward mail to my @hotmail.com account that I have had since hotmail first came on line.
I guess huh?You actually use Hotmail? Guess you better quit your job because you mustn't be very good at it.
</sarcasm>
I think you guys are really taking this out of hand.
You're going to have to look at the type of position. I deal in the highly technical side of web/email. Would I discount someones ability if they were applying for a position that included managing a bunch of e-mail systems and claimed to be an e-mail expert while using hotmail? Yes.
Would I discount someone applying for a database or development position? No.
Also look at the username in your e-mail. Plenty of folks, HR included, drop resumes on the spot for those that have unprofessional or senseless usernames on their e-mail address...like sexyjohn@hotmail.com. You'd be surprised how many folks use those addressees in professional circumstances.
What I consider a technical position isn't what other people consider technical positions. Removing hotmail from your e-mail address may or may not make the difference. I can tell you that there are folks out there who would discount a hotmail user. Would you want to work for someone that did? Depends.
The way I see it is this: almost everyone has enough tech saavy to bs their way into a job these days. What separates the wheat from the chaff are the little intangibles....choice of email, choice of OS, etc.
I would hold a Linux guy above a windows guy above a mac guy, simply because i know what can be learned by simply using each. Can a Mac person know more about development than a Linux person? Sure, but I havent met one in person that can yet.
Why would someone CHOOSE AOL? My guess is because they need the internet presented to them, they lack the ability to find things. Always true? No, but often enough to be true.
Hotmail is the new AOL. I have a hotmail account simply because Microsoft used to require it for a liveid, but I don't use it. I have Facebook for social networking, I dont need my email to do it too
If you can't winnow out the wheat from the chaff in an interview, you have no business participating in the hiring process.
Particularly since the advent of OS X, which hides an honest to goodness unix-based core underneath its lingerie, Apple has quietly gained a following among technoscenti leaving their previous favorite desktop unix, often due to the faded love for the time-consuming hobbyist aspects of maintaining a home Linux or *BSD box. So you do see apple aficionados at a variety of points in the clue curve, including at the high end.Can a Mac person know more about development than a Linux person? Sure, but I havent met one in person that can yet.
Particularly since the advent of OS X, which hides an honest to goodness unix-based core underneath its lingerie, Apple has quietly gained a following among technoscenti leaving their previous favorite desktop unix, often due to the faded love for the time-consuming hobbyist aspects of maintaining a home Linux or *BSD box. So you do see apple aficionados at a variety of points in the clue curve, including at the high end.
-harry
Particularly since the advent of OS X, which hides an honest to goodness unix-based core underneath its lingerie, Apple has quietly gained a following among technoscenti leaving their previous favorite desktop unix, often due to the faded love for the time-consuming hobbyist aspects of maintaining a home Linux or *BSD box. So you do see apple aficionados at a variety of points in the clue curve, including at the high end.
-harry
I think you guys are really taking this out of hand.
You're going to have to look at the type of position. I deal in the highly technical side of web/email. Would I discount someones ability if they were applying for a position that included managing a bunch of e-mail systems and claimed to be an e-mail expert while using hotmail? Yes.
Would I discount someone applying for a database or development position? No.
Also look at the username in your e-mail. Plenty of folks, HR included, drop resumes on the spot for those that have unprofessional or senseless usernames on their e-mail address...like sexyjohn@hotmail.com. You'd be surprised how many folks use those addressees in professional circumstances.
What I consider a technical position isn't what other people consider technical positions. Removing hotmail from your e-mail address may or may not make the difference. I can tell you that there are folks out there who would discount a hotmail user. Would you want to work for someone that did? Depends.
By coincidence I am on a hiring panel for a IT specialist position here doing everything from level 2 help desk support to scripting new user apps to new machine configurations to database management to server administration.
I looked at the email domains on the top five candidate's resumes:
juno.com
hotmail.com
gmail.com
a personal domain
a present employer's domain
an email address with their ISP "crestviewcable.net"
Hmm I wonder what you guys think about a hiring manager who would discount applicants that did not have a BS in Comp Sci as not being qualified for the position. Seems more applicable than which email domain they would be using for their home email account.
If you respond with the hiring manager would be a fool for not looking at their experience level and qualifications based on deliverable and goals at previous jobs, then you have your answer as to why discounting someone based on their email domain is also foolish.
Now that's pretty stupid when you are inquiring about another job.a present employer's domain
A long time ago at a company far away I and two other people were interviewing candidates for an engineering position. We looked at three candidates one had a MS EE and the other two had BS EE's. The MS EE's thesis was to determine the resistance of a resistive ladder, something I and the two other candidates had done in our 2nd year of undergrad work. The position called for a very good knowledge of HPIB, aka IEEE488 instrument control language, a good understanding of RF test environments, plus basic RF knowledge. The MS guy ranked last, he could not even program in basic. How he got any degree was beyond me. But our manager wanted him because he had a MS. So he was hired. Eventually we had to get him a couple of interns for the summer to fix his work. It took a couple of years but he finally transferred to the marketing department.Like the company that cut the interview short when I didn't have the B.S? Not that I said I did.
Hmm I wonder what you guys think about a hiring manager who would discount applicants that did not have a BS in Comp Sci as not being qualified for the position. Seems more applicable than which email domain they would be using for their home email account.
I'll remember that next time I'm involved in interview way more people than there are actually qualified for the job.
You give everyone that applies an interview? If you answer yes, than I know you're full of it.
What separates the wheat from the chaff are the little intangibles....choice of email, choice of OS, etc."
I would hold a Linux guy above a windows guy above a mac guy, simply because i know what can be learned by simply using each. Can a Mac person know more about development than a Linux person? Sure, but I havent met one in person that can yet.
Sigh.Hmm I wonder what you guys think about a hiring manager who would discount applicants that did not have a BS in Comp Sci as not being qualified for the position. Seems more applicable than which email domain they would be using for their home email account.
And I said that same thing as it pertains to education. Grabbing a free email domain says nothing about a person at all. Worrying about what your domain is seems as petty as what brand sneakers you wear to the playground. It says absolutely nothing about the person.Sigh.
Just because I said something you could improve on your resume--that will only help--and is looked down upon by some (I proved some do look down upon it) does not mean that a degree is worthless.
A BS in Comp Sci has a hell of a lot of value...as does many years of experience in the areas required.
A hotmail isn't a deal breaker--it sure the hell isn't a positive--and does carry some negative value DEPENDING ON THE POSITION.
Meh, I give in.
Hotmail is what all the uber geeks use. AOL is actually the cream of the crop of the internet. And Macs are used by geeks too.
Next time I am helping review 100s of candidates, I better give them all interviews, since I might miss out on the next great programmer that uses AOL on his Microsoft Bob computer. It may take months, but hey, I got the right guy.
With the rate you're snatching up the hotmail users, I may not have any duds left to look at!I'm with Slappy -- please continue to use your criteria.
The duds need a job somewhere, too.
With the rate you're snatching up the hotmail users, I may not have any duds left to look at!
Its not crazy, its a waste of time. Using the small intangibles to qualify/disqualify candidates makes interview day easier.If you hadn't noticed...
I don't really care if they are "hotmail users."
I'm more concerned with their demonstrated knowledge, skills, attitudes, and overall competency for the position.
Call me crazy....
Its not crazy, its a waste of time.
Using the small intangibles to qualify/disqualify candidates makes interview day easier.
Why would I interview someone that I know I'm not going to hire?
To Scott's point, i was hired without a degree, and i lost money because of it. When i look at non degreed candidates, I look at them for what they are: a bargain
Its not crazy, its a waste of time. Using the small intangibles to qualify/disqualify candidates makes interview day easier.
Why would I interview someone that I know I'm not going to hire?
To Scott's point, i was hired without a degree, and i lost money because of it. When i look at non degreed candidates, I look at them for what they are: a bargain
EXCEPT in the very narrow case that Jesse mentioned -- if you were hiring someone to setup and maintain a mailserver, for example.
I've done a lot of hiring of software developers, and I can't say I've ever applied much significance to their email addresses.
This is often a question of taste, and if you filter based on it, you're really just selecting candidates based on similarities to yourself, and that's a mistake.
Engineers vary in the extent to which they ply their craft as a hobby at home. It's really not useful to try to evaluate them on that basis. There are plenty of 24hr geeks with just enough ability to get their Linux machine and vanity domain up and running, but it took everything they had. And there are plenty who are "geek at work, Daddy at home", for whom things like outside email accounts are not something on which they hang their identity, and work is something you do on the clock, when somebody is paying you.
-harry
Engineers vary in the extent to which they ply their craft as a hobby at home. It's really not useful to try to evaluate them on that basis. There are plenty of 24hr geeks with just enough ability to get their Linux machine and vanity domain up and running, but it took everything they had. And there are plenty who are "geek at work, Daddy at home", for whom things like outside email accounts are not something on which they hang their identity, and work is something you do on the clock, when somebody is paying you.
-harry
What I'm not getting is why anyone here is arguing this point....no one is ENTITLED to an interview, and I can deny the request for almost any reason I want.
For example, I reviewed a resume the other day was printed in a cursive font. Should I look beyond that irritation too, since they might actually know what they're doing, they just don't understand that certain things are not done?
How about the guy that listed his MySpace credentials on his resume? Should I look past the boneheaded move on his part of actually thinking that his "awesome CSS work on MySpace" is applicable to a web development job?
Maybe, maybe not. I'll thank each of you to not tell me how to do my job, and in Slap's case, to not use the veiled threat of "Does your boss know?" on me, it doesn't scare me, because I know what we're looking for in candidates, and its not intellectually dumb hipster internet folk that can't find a real email provider.