PHY2049 w/ Woods
Any advice on how to do well in this class? Is it better to read textbook or watch his videos? 90% of our grade is on exams but there’s only two so if anyone has any tips on how to approach this class I would really appreciate it!
Any advice on how to do well in this class? Is it better to read textbook or watch his videos? 90% of our grade is on exams but there’s only two so if anyone has any tips on how to approach this class I would really appreciate it!
I used to love coding and the process of coming to my own solution and discovering creative ways to solve problems. But now I'm halfway through my college degree in computer engineering and it feels like nobody is willing to form an independent thought or complete a basic assignment without consulting an LLM. I've also heard people are losing their jobs for refusing to use LLMs which doesn't sound cool at all
I have no idea where to go from here, it's too late for me to change my major into something that doesn't embrace generative AI so heavily. Even then, I have no idea what else I would do; I've always been good at writing and I like that too but I have no clue whether such jobs will be available in the near future. I feel so stupid, I thought this would just be some fad and now I've wasted 2 years.
If anyone has any advice and/or is in a similar position, I would greatly appreciate it
that's it lol if anyone has anything to say, i would really appreciate it! both online
I'm a computer engineering student so I have very little perspective on this and was just genuinely curious! I've always been interested in computing because of the problem-solving aspect, but now with AI being shoved down my throat the past few semesters, I'm beginning to feel that the reasons I love this field are becoming obsolete.
I've also always loved to read and write, so I just wanted to ask how your relationship with English/reading/writing has changed since you began your studies! Not a fan of AI/LLMs so just having a sort of quarter life crisis