At this point I'm convinced this is a troll account
They are also the holding company which owns Indeed.com
Location: Wanting to relocate to Seattle, WA Remote: No Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: C#, .NET, AngularJS, ASP.NET Web API, Entity Framework, MS SQL Résumé/CV:…
Location: Las Vegas, NV Remote: Not 100% Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: C#, ASP.NET Web API/MVC, AngularJS, Typescript -- very open to non MS stacks Résumé/CV:…
Location: Las Vegas, NV Remote: Not 100% Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: C#, ASP.NET Web API/MVC, AngularJS, very open to non MS stacks Résumé/CV: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1WH_Cn_c_cgV6M5MIXceMxg_J...…
To be fair, I think he meant he "solved" it by googling and finding a stack overflow link. He wasn't being literal (I thought he was as well at first).
OP here. Good point, it is definitely using standard deduction.
Very true. Different individuals have their own spending amount. I tried to use a reasonable average when adjusting the salaries but if you are far away from average, then your own calculations will be different.
Based on the sources I used, they would probably not includes those extras (unless they self-reported them at glassdoor.com I guess).
Thanks, I hope it helped.
0
It is actually correct. Variance is standard deviation squared.
At this point I'm convinced this is a troll account
They are also the holding company which owns Indeed.com
Location: Wanting to relocate to Seattle, WA Remote: No Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: C#, .NET, AngularJS, ASP.NET Web API, Entity Framework, MS SQL Résumé/CV:…
Location: Las Vegas, NV Remote: Not 100% Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: C#, ASP.NET Web API/MVC, AngularJS, Typescript -- very open to non MS stacks Résumé/CV:…
Location: Las Vegas, NV Remote: Not 100% Willing to relocate: Yes Technologies: C#, ASP.NET Web API/MVC, AngularJS, very open to non MS stacks Résumé/CV: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1WH_Cn_c_cgV6M5MIXceMxg_J...…
To be fair, I think he meant he "solved" it by googling and finding a stack overflow link. He wasn't being literal (I thought he was as well at first).
OP here. Good point, it is definitely using standard deduction.
Very true. Different individuals have their own spending amount. I tried to use a reasonable average when adjusting the salaries but if you are far away from average, then your own calculations will be different.
Based on the sources I used, they would probably not includes those extras (unless they self-reported them at glassdoor.com I guess).
Thanks, I hope it helped.
0
It is actually correct. Variance is standard deviation squared.