Every minor should require taking a senior-level course

Here’s my possibly elitist university education hot take: I think completing a minor in a discipline should require you to take at least one fourth year course in that discipline.

A minor isn’t a degree, true. But I think claiming to have a minor in a field should mean you’re somewhat literate in a reasonable subset of the basics that any major in that discipline would know and that you have exposure to at least one advanced topic.

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AI was never about democratizing creativity

I’ve started thinking a little bit about creativity in the context of AI. If you’ve known me for several years, you might be aware that I’m really not a fan of the word “creativity” or of its noun and adjective form “creative”. I’ve mellowed on it a little bit over the years, but generally speaking I still believe that it’s a wildly misused buzzword with dubious meaning in the average colloquial setting, and that lots of people actually have no idea what creativity is. It really bothers me when people conflate creativity with artistic ability, or when people act like it’s some sort of gene you either have or don’t, instead of understanding that it’s a skill you can improve. But in a lot of ways, it’s the best word we have, and so I’m going to use it today.

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You Need to Be Proactive

One of the things that has been repeatedly drilled into me over the past year or so is the fact that if you want people to do things for you, you’re most likely going to have to harass them. (I don’t mean literal harassment, by the way – please don’t commit a criminal offense and say I encouraged you.) This is true especially when working with highly busy people like managers and professors. If you want something, you can’t just assume they’ll intuit that and give it to you – you have to ask (and assume they’ll forget, then ask them again). If you need them to do something for you, you’ll need to remind them, and inform them of the deadline, likely multiple times. Everyone has their own problems to worry about and the thing you need might not be top of mind. The burden of remembering is on you.

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Once your art is out there, you don't own it anymore

Once your art is out there, you don’t own it anymore. People get to have opinions about it and frame or interpret it however they want. I’m not sure how I feel about that.

It can be very cool but it’s also strange and disorienting. I feel like what I like about my work isn’t necessarily what other people like about it.

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