|
May
2 |
|
awarded | Guru |
|
Apr
8 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Apr
8 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Apr
2 |
|
awarded | Popular Question |
|
Mar
4 |
|
awarded | Good Answer |
|
Feb
9 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Feb
9 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Dec
13 |
|
awarded | Nice Answer |
|
Dec
5 |
|
awarded | Notable Question |
|
Nov
7 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Oct
15 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Oct
15 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Aug
9 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Aug
9 |
|
awarded | Popular Question |
|
Jul
8 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Jul
8 |
|
awarded | Yearling |
|
Jun
8 |
|
awarded | Caucus |
|
Jun
8 |
|
awarded | Good Answer |
|
May
21 |
|
awarded | Announcer |
|
Apr
13 |
|
comment |
Why did an interviewer ask me a question about people eating curry? The point is not the approach of making up numbers, it's the approach of determining what numbers you need to come up with, and how to combine them to get the final answer. In an interview situation, these would be WAGs. In the real world, you could come up with a more reasonable answer by doing some research to find better numbers for each assumption. |