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Gurucharan Subramani GuruCharan94

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@QuinnyPig
QuinnyPig / resignation.txt
Last active January 31, 2023 06:51
Templated resignation letter
Dear BOSS,
Please accept this letter as formal notification that I am resigning from my position as JOB TITLE with COMPANY. My last day will be DATE OF LAST DAY.
Thank you so much for the opportunity to work in this position for the past DURATION. I’ve greatly enjoyed and appreciated the opportunities I’ve had to WTF DID YOU DO, and I’ve learned many things, all of which I will take with me throughout my career.
During my last two weeks, I’ll do everything possible to wrap up my duties and train other team members. Please let me know if there’s anything else I can do to aid during the transition.
I wish COMPANY continued success, and I hope to stay in touch in the future.
Sincerely,
@jeanlucaslima
jeanlucaslima / Readme.md
Last active June 20, 2024 14:55
Remote Work Resources

Remote Jobs general guideline

This is something I compiled during the last weeks while job hunting. If you miss something in this list, please fork or tell me on twitter and I'll add what's missing.

  1. Be careful with jobs that are not clear they hire outside US
  2. Look for job in niches (like SaaS job boards, language-specific communities, country-focused, and so on)
  3. Avoid Upwork (pay to work, no guaranteed results, often bad contracts) and Remote.com
  4. Remote.co is not Remote.com, remote.co is ok.
  5. There are companies that hire and act as a guild, but only pay as freelancer (X-team, Gun.io, and so on)
  6. Not really focused on freelancing, as it is to me more like a one-person business
@avoidik
avoidik / install.cmd
Last active July 11, 2022 16:37
Azure-Cli under cygwin
@echo off
setup-x86_64.exe -g -B -D -L -d -o -N -s http://cygwin.mirror.constant.com/ -l c:/tools/cygwin/distro -R c:/tools/cygwin -M
@jezhumble
jezhumble / coc.md
Last active November 9, 2019 05:19
Some notes on codes of conduct from a conference organizer's perspective

Some notes on codes of conduct from a conference organizer's perspective

  1. The customers of a Code of Conduct are the people whom it is protecting. For tech conferences, that means marginalized people.
  2. The Code of Conduct is a promise to its customers from the conference organizers that they will be in a safe space, and that they will be protected and given the benefit of the doubt in the event of something bad happening.
  3. Thus the wording of a code of conduct should be decided by its customers. The Geek Feminism wiki hosts an example code of conduct: http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Anti-harassment_policy_resources
  4. The legal basis of a code of conduct is my right, as an event organizer, to kick anybody out of my private event for any reason, even if they have paid. This happens all the time, often with the most flimsy excuses: http://www.hannahettinger.com/guest-post-by-clare/

If you, as a non-customer of the CoC, are not

@tsiege
tsiege / The Technical Interview Cheat Sheet.md
Last active November 23, 2024 21:58
This is my technical interview cheat sheet. Feel free to fork it or do whatever you want with it. PLEASE let me know if there are any errors or if anything crucial is missing. I will add more links soon.

ANNOUNCEMENT

I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!






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