This early Facebook invests wants to get smart students a job at the next Facebook
For some college seniors, school is a period for
self-exploration, thinking about alternatives, leisurely mulling over what's to
come.
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Computer Engg Project |
However, that is once in a while the case for computer engineering
students who either go to the world's best universities or ascend to the top of
their classes. Very quickly after choosing their courses during the first week
of school, they ordinarily end up at their college career fair, thinking about
whether they should meet with any likes of Google or Facebook. Furthermore,
when they do, they often get an offer with a signing reward and often with a
48-hour exploding deadline.
The perception is that saying no means getting forever
boycotted by that outfit. In any case, serial founder turned investor Ali
Partovi — who has appreciated success over his profession with, and alongside,
twin sibling Hadi — demands its deliberate misdirection. "There are only
so many extraordinary students graduating, and there are way, way, way more
jobs to be filled than there are CS graduates. Like, the students should be
giving the organization deadlines."
To get out that message — that students have options and
needn't allow huge tech organizations to limit these rashly — Partovi is
sorting out something new. Through his four-year-old networking company, Neo,
and its associated endeavor fund, he is organizing a sort of virtual
matchmaking spectacle on August 8 that acquaints students with a totally
different kinds of opportunities.
Gain some work experience by applying to this freelance computer Engg project now!
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