> Our licenses, of course, also stipulated the things you mentioned, but hackers will be hackers, so we had to deal with some interesting circumstances from time to time.
Could you share two of your favourite stories related to this?
Why would you want to be able to access your personal projects from your phone? What context requires this over waiting and solving the problem at home?
What about work life balance? (yes, it's a personal project, but still)
It's also equally hard to trust give it's based on Hindu scripture, and the Wikipedia article itself states that they're considered mythical creatures.
As someone mentioned above, you absolutely need to sort out your CV. Here's a couple of points that differ from the other commenters:
- make it a one page CV
- remove any work experience that's not relevant
- write in active voice about each experience. Quantifying your contributions
- remove hobbies, particularly anything related to religion. It's not relevant, and is recommended not to include such personal info in your CV.
- only show your undergraduate degree. No one cares about GDE (unless applying to grad school) or your high school grades.
- remove personal interests; no one cares. It's distracting from selling your work experience.
- remove references and write "available on request". Background check happen after interviews.
- remove languages unless relevant to the job.
- remove volunteering experience; why on earth have you included CouchSurfng there?
- remove your address. Too personal.
- add link to your LinkedIn.
- remove objective. This should come through in your experience what you're interested in.
- remove those images. They offer no value to the ready and take up 20% of both pages.
You find jobs by applying. That simple. Your CV must sell your work experience as valuable to the employee and current yours does not.
Assume employers will spend 30 seconds skimming it before deciding if you will get a chance. Your current CV does not cut it.
Its identifiable, yes, but not personal. Otherwise, all free-form text entry would have to be processed prior to a GDPR request, which is not likely.
Take Facebook as an example, when you request your personal data, they present what is linked in their database to you, which is of course not where anyone mentions your name. Who is to say that my name (Paul Smith) identifies me and not some other Paul?
Could you share two of your favourite stories related to this?