Anonymous wrote:I mean there's so much out there.
You are all just lazy CS drones if you can't find this on your own.
We Need Anthropologists Everywhere—Especially in AI
https://alumni.cornell.edu/cornellians/boyd-humanities-stem/
Why a humanities degree can AI-proof your career
Studying philosophy armed me with skills that can’t be replicated by tech
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/jobs/career-advice/why-humanities-degree-protect-you-against-ai/
there's even a whole post on here from 2 weeks ago: https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1250789.page
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
I watched it. His point was that English majors (and equivalent humanities majors) are better at crafting prompts than STEM folks. Generative AI is fueled by natural language prompts, so the ability to translate various business needs into clear, effective prompts is crucial to the success of AI.
People should read the NYT article about how the CEO of Klarna is just giddy about replacing people with AI.
His examples:
- got rid of most of the marketing and creatives working on advertising and marketing because AI can produce what’s needed for corporate marketing
- reduced in-house legal staff because AI can do first drafts of standard corporate contracts and any legal research
- replaced most customer support people with AI chatbots
He hasn’t hired anyone since 2023 even though the company is much larger.
No surprise, most of the existing 2000 employees are technical employees.
So again, can anyone tell me what all these humanities majors will actually be hired to do in this AI future?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
I watched it. His point was that English majors (and equivalent humanities majors) are better at crafting prompts than STEM folks. Generative AI is fueled by natural language prompts, so the ability to translate various business needs into clear, effective prompts is crucial to the success of AI.
People should read the NYT article about how the CEO of Klarna is just giddy about replacing people with AI.
His examples:
- got rid of most of the marketing and creatives working on advertising and marketing because AI can produce what’s needed for corporate marketing
- reduced in-house legal staff because AI can do first drafts of standard corporate contracts and any legal research
- replaced most customer support people with AI chatbots
He hasn’t hired anyone since 2023 even though the company is much larger.
No surprise, most of the existing 2000 employees are technical employees.
So again, can anyone tell me what all these humanities majors will actually be hired to do in this AI future?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
I watched it. His point was that English majors (and equivalent humanities majors) are better at crafting prompts than STEM folks. Generative AI is fueled by natural language prompts, so the ability to translate various business needs into clear, effective prompts is crucial to the success of AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
Mark Cuban was saying that a decade ago.
STEM is dead. The real job prospects for the future are for humanities majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they already are asking for english, history, philosophy and classics.
No one wants a CS coder....
This isn’t true. Everyone wants coders, there’s just a lot more of them.
+1. Coding is necessary for evertthing but very entry level work in AI. Google it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they already are asking for english, history, philosophy and classics.
No one wants a CS coder....
This isn’t true. Everyone wants coders, there’s just a lot more of them.
Anonymous wrote:You guys are so myopic.
This is about visionary leaders looking beyond the landscape today and see how fast things are changing.
Not sure how it will play out, but it makes sense that in a few years, it would be the revenge of the English majors.
The world is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
I watched it. His point was that English majors (and equivalent humanities majors) are better at crafting prompts than STEM folks. Generative AI is fueled by natural language prompts, so the ability to translate various business needs into clear, effective prompts is crucial to the success of AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone catch the Fareed Zakaria interview today with Hoffman on the impact of AI on job market/new world order with AI, and that yrs the “revenge of the English major” - meaning it’s a valuable major now in a world where other tasks are commoditized and diminished in value?
Anonymous wrote:Who is supposedly hiring these humanities majors and for how much $$s?
Yeah, I know that top Ibanks and consulting firms have always hired ones from elite schools, but still often in smaller numbers than kids with quantitative backgrounds.
There are always these announcements but the specifics are often murky to nonexistent.
My kid works for an AI company and they are desperate for ML engineers and the like…but not clamoring for humanities at all. Sure, they will hire in sales and non-tech stuff…but aren’t specifically looking for it, just don’t care so much about undergrad major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they already are asking for english, history, philosophy and classics.
No one wants a CS coder....
CS from the elites is still doing very well. English/classics/philosophy are more and more in demand every day. Though too it is much easier in those majors from elites.
Evidence of those majors being more in demand? Classics departments across the country are crumbling. Philosophy departments hardly have any majors. English is and always will be popular.
Do your own research.
Check any Ivy’s handshake.
The data is there.