If you compare threads within a year you can notice lot of developers re-posting their offers from month to month, some of them have pretty strong profiles and still it happens. I don't believe that all of them are that much picky, and especially incapable for work or to pass a reasonable interview.
Similar for companies, some of them have pretty small teams and very common tech stack but still can't fill position for months or even a year, makes me want to ask myself "How is their project even progressing in meantime... do they even have a real project and urge for developer or its completely optional".
I know it's market crisis atm but still it doesn't explain it completely, do you have a proper explanation?
I have been using Hacker News for almost 15 years and saw the evolution of both threads over this period.
Who is hiring? thread used to be about personal recruiting and opportunities posted by individuals who were also engaged here. For example, I met a founder who previously went through YC batch and also a VC who was recruiting for one of his portfolio company, through this thread.
Now, the "Who is hiring?" thread has degraded into just another "impersonal" source of potential candidates, like LinkedIn, Indeed and other job boards, and/or being used for market exposure to target audience. Postings from personal and/or engaged accounts have dwindled to almost none.
IMO, you are likely to have better experience if you ignore postings that redirect you to career page to apply and postings from new accounts and/or accounts that do not actively engage in the community.
Who wants to be hired? thread seems to have had several incarnations, over the years, for people looking for job and or project. I regularly post to this thread and routinely get contacted, mostly by wannabe entrepreneurs who want people to work for free/equity only or recruiters. But I am not a traditional job searcher.
I received two paid engagements through this thread, primarily through direct contact by founders. First one was a pre-seed incubator startup that engaged me for a pilot with a potential customer. We parted ways after successful engagement in few months as I didn't want to move back to US and for long-term effectiveness with targeted vertical, a US based person would have been better fit. Actually, later I also participated in their seed round and with excellent outcome till now. The second one (latest) was a seed funded startup that engaged me for a PoC with a large Japanese company, which turned out be a very bad fit with poor culture and poor communications. They still haven't paid me for the time I worked with them.
I have also made good connections with a few fellow posters on this thread. I generally reach out to posters on this thread whose profile I find interesting.
IMO, if you focus on contacts by people who are engaged in community, you will have better experience. Now, I generally ask for HN username as a first step. Also, don't work for free, timely exchange of any money is a good indicator of character.
I assume a lot of these are evergreen postings - companies trying to get people to apply so they can select the top people if one applies, or employees looking for a better job. Basically, most people/companies should always be looking, even if they aren't desperate to jump on the first thing.
I actually love the responses and people I meet from the who is looking for work threads. I feel like I might still be fishing out there if it didn't offend the people I work with.
It could be similar to Tinder addiction. Looking for a date but not to marry. Some of it might just be measuring if they're still marketable.
The last time I job searched in 2020, it took 7 months. For me, it was the adoption of the leetcode interview process, even at startups. I'm not especially good at leetcoding, and at some companies you need to solve 4-8 problems. So it's just a strange stochastic process where eventually you pass them all, but it takes many tries.
I posted my info in the last one of those threads and exactly one person reached out, for a role that did not sound appealing me that I wasn’t a great fit for. I have an active StackOverflow (top 18% this year), active Github, several tech articles on Medium (~50 followers), I’ve read many books on SWE (like beautiful teams and mythical man month), TripleByte certified (apparently less than 2% of SWEs pass that) of course TripleByte is dead now… but yeah, I’ve never worked at FAANG but I’m no slouch.