I think it’s akin to a child growing up with technology, and therefore being able to operate with it at an intuitive level.
These interns have never not used AI (in the industry), so they haven’t had the “handicap” of traditional development experience that slows down their AI usage.
A senior will see a problem they’ve done a thousand times and do it again the same way, a junior with AI will try to make it fit into any new hole they find.
"AI-native" refers to understanding what new areas of value are unlocked by the existence of modern AI systems, and which old problems no longer matter because you can just have Claude trivially deal with them. Not everyone who's familiar with AI tooling necessarily has those instincts.
Instead of trying to get the actual SOC 2 attestation, do a version of the homework that would get you there; basically writing documentation. The output would be documents describing different procedures or existing infra (disaster recovery, network diagrams etc) and a master spreadsheet with the "soc 2" questions (that you pick) and answers, a "security questionnaire" and this is what you send to companies when they insist.
Note in security-speak the keyword is "mitigation" (you don't have x but you mitigate that by y)
As someone with access to both Japanese ofuro and sauna, they are quite different in some respects. And similar in others. One thing which a sauna could do for me when the ofuro could not, was to fix a problem I had with coughing. Something which plauged me for a long time, and which the doctors couldn't find any reason for, but I had such painful daily coughs that it really bothered me. Couldn't sleep on my back either. Then I noticed that if I used the sauna daily, and carefully breathed hot air, the symptoms lessened. And after going for the daily sauna regime (instead of occasionally) for some time, the coughing problem I had for years finally disappeared. The hot baths did nothing for this (but was good for other things, e.g. muscle pains. And essential for being able to sleep at cold winter nights in non-insulated Japanese homes.. heating up the body with a very long very hot bath does wonders)
David Roche, a notable running coach (and runner), and his co-coaching wife (and runner) Dr. Megan Roche (MD/PhD) seem to think that hot tubs need to be at least 106F to generate much of a heat shock response, which is normally what one is looking for in the context of post-exercise heat exposure. I should note, however, that they are mostly reading the same research papers as everybody else, not doing primary studies themselves.
Being that the recommended max temperature for hot tubs is 104F that could be an issue. Hot tubs are definitely more pleasurable than saunas, and if it comes "close enough" I'd be fine with that.
I agree that estimation questions (not "brain teasers" as coming up with the clever solution) are good. Developers should be able to think in orders of magnitude.
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