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Yang Zhongke-my college life.
Summary: Freshman studies hard for one year, sophomore prepares for postgraduate entrance examination, junior gives up postgraduate entrance examination technology, and senior continues to study technology and do projects part-time.

I always wanted to apply for computer major in the college entrance examination, but I applied for mechanical major in a muddle, so I felt particularly lost at that time. Losing is losing, but fortunately, I didn't give up on myself. I know that "no one will give up on you unless you give up on yourself", and opportunities are only reserved for those who are prepared. Therefore, I still study hard, treat my freshman year as a senior year, go out early and come back late every day, and learn things by myself every day. I did well in every subject and did well in the exam. I will prove that my efforts have not been in vain in the future.

At the end of my freshman year, the school organized metalworking practice, which many engineering students had to do, that is, operating machine tools, drawing drawings and making abrasives in the factory. The thought of doing this after graduation annoys me. It's not that I despise doing machinery. You know, many people who learn mechanics well still learn it well, but I don't like this industry. I like computers. During my internship, I told myself every day that I would try my best to change this face. I am my savior.

At that time, an idea came up: if you want to enter the computer industry, you can only take exams and study across majors. If you want to take an interdisciplinary postgraduate entrance examination, you must first learn computer courses well. During my metalworking practice, I collected professional courses for computer majors and bought textbooks for computer majors in the bookstore. I rented a house in my hometown county in the summer vacation of my freshman year, locked myself in the house, and taught myself three or four computer professional courses in one summer vacation.

Sophomore began to skip classes. I skipped classes not to do anything else, but to go to the library and continue to teach myself computer courses. Set aside an hour or two every day to teach yourself what you want to say in this major, and the rest of the time is to study computer courses. Of course, English and math are not behind. When I was a sophomore, I skipped almost every class because I thought those teachers were completely misleading my children. They could talk about what I learned for two hours a day. When I was a sophomore, I accumulated a lot of valuable self-study time because I skipped school. After my sophomore year, I have finished all the professional courses of computer major by myself.

A notice about changing majors on the campus network in the second semester of my sophomore year changed my college life. Our school has prepared a major in logistics engineering and enrolled 50 sophomores. Seeing that there are many computer courses in this major, I decided to switch to this major because the setting of this major is 1/3 machinery, 1/3 management, 1/3 computer.

It's only half a month before the final exam of sophomore year, but I haven't finished many mechanical courses by myself. At that time, I made a desperate decision to "give up the mechanical courses that I was not sure about and make every effort to prepare for the exam and change to a major." At that time, it seems that more than 400 people signed up for the big change, and I made this decision with great risks. 400 people only accept 50 people, which is 1: 8. But it also proves the benefits of learning math and English well in my freshman and sophomore years. Change majors to take advanced mathematics and English. I reviewed the advanced mathematics for more than half a month, because I learned it as a freshman, and then I raided several sets of English papers. I have passed Band 4 in my sophomore year, so English is not a problem. Finally, I turned to the professional exam results, and I ranked eighth. I was so excited.

After the examination for changing majors, I was still waiting for my grades, so I struggled to tackle several mechanical courses. At that time, I found the course of mechanical principle too difficult, and I couldn't devote all my energy to it in time. So I gave up the mechanical principle and switched to other professional courses. In the end, I only failed the mechanical principle in the exam, hehe.

I am a junior majoring in logistics, and my mentality has changed a lot. After all, this is my choice.

At the beginning of my junior year, I still held the idea of taking the postgraduate entrance examination for computer majors, but gradually I got to know more about the postgraduate students and found that many graduate students were doing free labor for tutors and bosses. I also gradually realized that people who mix in society don't care about your academic qualifications, but value your ability. I feel that I have learned well in computer major courses, but I have a foundation. As long as you increase your development skills in your junior year, you can get along well after graduation, but reading many graduate students' so-called master's theses is nonsense.

My junior year is to learn development skills, because I decided to do software development in the future. When I was a junior, I studied Delphi for one year. In one year, I involved all things related to Delphi and developed countless small softwares, which laid a solid foundation for my development skills.

As I said before, in my junior year, I didn't jump around in various languages like others, but used Delphi as a weapon to attack every corner of software development, which proved to be very correct.

I saw that interviews and written tests in many big companies don't care much about whether you can develop skills such as VC, C#, Java and website development, but value your foundation, such as the level of computer professional courses and algorithms, so I continued to strengthen my basic courses and applied for Computer Rank Test Band 4, because Computer Rank 4 examines computer professional courses.

In the summer vacation of my junior year, I did another important thing for myself, that is, I wanted to organize an open source project on campus, and I was going to find some people interested in software development to develop a small thing together in the summer vacation. The last computer graduate student developed with me. Although he quit because a project was only developed for half a month, it also laid the groundwork for my later opportunity. During the rest of the summer vacation, I continued to develop some small software by myself, and began to write some articles about development (there was no blog at that time). I also wrote some articles for the software newspaper, published them three or four times, and translated an English document of an open source project. What happened later proved that these efforts were not in vain. Your efforts will never be in vain. Don't give yourself an excuse not to work hard.

When the third year of high school started, I just returned to the dormitory one day. A buddy said someone called me and asked me to call back. When I went back, I found that it was my brother who developed open source projects with me that summer vacation. He said that he had a private job outside and needed a developer at present, so he recommended me to go. The first project experience in my life was born like this. The project took four months to complete. Accumulated project experience and exercised time skills. The power of contacts is powerful. You should find the noble people in your life. At that moment, that brother was my noble person, and I won this noble person myself. Everyone said it was unintentional, but at that time, you couldn't do it without it.

1 1 month to start looking for a job. Due to my ignorance, I found that campus recruitment of big companies such as Microsoft started in September, and I have missed the opportunity. I wanted to go to Beijing for development, so I didn't attend any job fairs in Jinan, but I went to Beijing several times and attended many job fairs in Beijing. However, because the campus recruitment of companies in Beijing mainly recruits students from universities in Beijing, I hit a wall everywhere, feeling very lost and suddenly feeling like a waste.

To tell an episode, I attended a job fair in China Soft in Beijing. In the last interview, those people were either masters or bachelors, all from Tsinghua and Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications. Helpless, in the end, because I am not a student of Beijing universities, I was passed on. . .

When I returned to school, I was waiting for the admission result of China Soft. One day, another subsidiary of ChinaSoft (not my subsidiary just now) asked me to sign a contract. I feel that this subsidiary is very ordinary. It happens that Shenzhen Kingdee Software will come to our school campus for recruitment the next day. Feeling that this company is better than ChinaSoft, I gave up ChinaSoft's offer and prepared to attack Kingdee Software. Everything happened so skillfully that I made life choices again and again. The right to choose is the right that needs to be cherished most.

Kingdee's written test and interview are very interesting.

After Kingdee's presentation, it is the first step to receive resumes, and many resumes will be screened out. That is to say, if the company doesn't like this company, it won't accept your resume at all. Only those whose resumes are accepted by the company can get the written test admission ticket.

The written test took three hours, and I finished it in over an hour. But seeing many people still answering questions, I thought to myself, "I must be finished." I guess I got it wrong, and people haven't worked so hard to finish it. "

A few days later, Kingdee informed me to go for an interview, and my heart was finally put down.

The interview process is the most interesting and I really want to share it with you.

The interview is divided into two rounds, one is a non-technical interview and the other is a technical interview.

When I entered the interview room, the examiner looked at me and asked me, "Do you know how many points you got in the written test?"

I said, "890 points."

Examiner "so confident? Why? "

I said that my computer knowledge was solid, and my professional knowledge and practical skills were good, so I answered easily.

The examiner smiled and said, "Yes. But I regret to tell you that you only got more than 50 points in the exam. Didn't expect it? "

The examiner looked at me carefully and then said slowly, "I just played a little joke on you." In fact, you scored 80 points, which is the highest score in the written test of campus recruitment. " I later thought, this is actually the examiner testing my ability to deal with emergencies and psychological endurance. If I was yelling or depressed at that time, it means that my psychological endurance is very poor. My performance at that time undoubtedly added a lot to my interview.

A small topic is that when I was interviewing in China Soft, I gave you an interview paper, which was filled with four arithmetic problems, so that everyone could finish it in three minutes. Many people, including me, worked hard. Finally, people said, "Most people made mistakes because you didn't read the title description, which means+stands for subtraction and-stands for addition."

In the second half of my senior year, my part-time company took another project, and I started to do it again.

I found a job and didn't have classes in the second half of my senior year. I also worked part-time, so I have every reason to stop touching books.

But I know this is my last chance to learn, but I can't give up learning.

I don't go to a part-time job every day, so I still seize every opportunity to know whether my life was in the study room or in the company. I feel that life is full. Students began to play games crazily when they found jobs, and began to look for jobs when they didn't find jobs, and they began to live a pig's life when they succeeded in taking the postgraduate entrance examination. Time cannot be wasted. Xu Sanduo said: "Don't mix life, be careful that life will mix you up."

I read a lot of books and learned a lot of new things in the second half of senior three. These things I learned in senior three have played a very good role in my future work. This is only half a year since I worked, and a colleague in the project team said that my skills and experience are nothing like those of more graduates. Hehe, I am full of shit.

On the last day of our senior year, the brothers in our dormitory took a group photo, and then took books to the study room for a symbolic study for 5 minutes, thus announcing the end of college life! ! !