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What level are you/years of experience do you have? Advice for Manager+ is pretty different from somebody with 2 years of being an independent contributor, or none.

I've heard from several people the one somewhat reliable in is knowing somebody on the inside of the place you're applying to. At this point having somebody being able to vouch for you is helpful to separate your resume from the slosh pile.

It's rough out there. Wishing you luck.


I have 25 years of experience, including at prestigious places like Blizzard and JPL. However I've worked for a variety of startups, none of which succeeded.


Talk to the people you worked over under and beside.


just a sampling of my rss reader this morning:

marginalia's blog for interesting tech problems building a search engine "specifically" for indie/small/old-web sites. (the search engine itself is a gold mine for exactly what you're looking for). https://www.marginalia.nu/log/

feuilleton for thoughtful posts on recent niche art history - http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/feed/

the spatial heritage review for advances in 3D models from an educational context https://nebulousflynn.substack.com/


that physical/mental pain in the process (much like more severe surgeries) is a thing - especially if it's something you retain any amount of consciousness with.

there's also the elephant in the room of coming back as a vegetable. whether due to biological damage or the brain simply not being able to recalibrate.


There was a really horrible and thought provoking movie on this on netflix, I wish I could remember the name. Basically a guy is revived but they're still experimenting with the unrefined process so he lives as an experiment trapped in a hospital.


also somebody who's worked remote for the last 5 years partially due to disabilities; there's lots of us out there. like somebody else said, go to the linkedin profiles of the fortune 500 (maybe 1000?) companies and start applying to the ones that filter out only-in-office.

also honestly sometimes even if the profile doesn't explicitly say 100% remote, it can be if they want you bad enough. i got an exemption in my current place that's technically "hybrid only" ... wishing you best of luck.


my dayjob (design manager at an international company) just had the mother of all adobe bugs/crashes/forcibly quits around 4pm EST. wonder if it's related to this.

makes me extremely thankful I do all of my creative print projects under this handle purely in OSS; ubuntu + krita + libreoffice. it's tricky sometimes but it's genuinely doable.


The legion of folks who learned to code via geocities/neocities websites/tumblr themes are a fantastic example of this. :)


generated images =/= created

AI generated images have the potential to be art in the eyes of the beholder, but let's not pretend that generation is the same as the mental, physical, and spiritual flow state that goes into painting or drawing a piece.


I don't think that's what the parent is doing. They're pointing out the hypocrisy of claiming AI art is copying copyrighted works because human artists are trained in similar ways. That's not making a claim about whether or not AI art is "real" art.


why not? human artists do exactly the same thing - combine learned patterns into new compositions.


Human artists create with intent. Statistical image generation throws paint at a million walls and keeps the handful that are statistically close to images tagged with words in a prompt.

That's not the same thing, and there's a reason why all of those generated images seem... off.


I think we may be talking about two different concepts regarding creation of art.

Absolutely humans (and myself, I'm a professional illustrator) use a mental patterns to come up with ideas.

The physical difference in AI generation is the lack of butt-in-chair time of the flow state. Painting/drawing/rendering art is not just mindless time to be compressed; it's a mental/physical/emotional/(and some would say spiritual) flow state with a lot of "input" abstractions beyond the patterns. Things like the creative's personal mood, personal past experiences, recent discussions with friends, recent texts they read ... those all fold into it. I wouldn't trade that flow state for the world, and it absolutely leaves fingerprints in my creations.


so you say what disqualifies AI is that it's a lot faster than humans at doing the same task


That’s definitely part of it, yeah. There’s other factors too, but that’s obviously one of the big ones.

So what? FurAffinity’s stated goal with the ban is to protect human artists. Obviously banning something that undermines human artists is a step towards that goal. If you want a place to show your AI art, there are plenty of other sites that will welcome you.


Humans don't usually do stroke for stroke copies of paintings. Or pixel for pixel sampling of photos, unless they get rights to the sources.


Neither does the AI, so what’s the point?

Yes, if you look hard enough you’ll find some. But that’s true on either side.


When humans copy verbatim, even only partially, there are consequences unless it's fair use.


If someone notices. There's no guarantee that anyone will, even the person doing it. I've certainly done my fair share of verbatim copying -- something I only realised weeks later, if ever.


neither does AI. They don't operate in pixel space, but in latent space, which is the same as a mental model and the neural networks that do this even have a lot in common with how our visual cortex works. The conversion to pixel only happens in the last step when the concept has been generated as mental model (latent representation). They're doing the same thing human designers do, just orders of magnitude faster.


May I ask where you're seeing this?


The fight is with the parents vs. educators. They can't stand that parents have ability to choose what books their kids should (or shouldn't) read.


No, this is just parents who are afraid of their personal worldview being challenged by their own kids (oh the insolence!).

Nobody came to these parents to tell them "your kid should not be reading X". If parents don't trust/like the curriculum of their local school, AFAIK homeschooling is still an option in the US.


Parents already have that. They are now trying to limit it for other children.

Why should I be allowed to deny your children access to books at school?


Ah, so these parents should be able to say their child shouldn't read a biology textbook that discusses the theory of evolution?


Nonono. They’re saying your child shouldn't read a biology textbook that discusses the theory of evolution.


Ah yes, the slipper slope. Let's be honest, librarians and educators have a ton of power and no oversight in indoctrinating children into the views that they want. Now that parents are challenging them, all of sudden, PEN America believes that parents should have no say on the material their kids read.


It's not a slippery slope. That is literally what you are advocating. The same parents who don't want their children to know what Ruby Bridges went through or that gay people exist also don't want their children to learn about evolution.


Libs of Tiktok posts a lot of this stuff trying to bring awareness about it.


Do note that the site the article is on does seem to be a bit agenda driven, regardless of the sources. Little grain of salt is always a good thing when messy situations like this arise.


Subscribestar, which I'm much more of a fan of since they have more common sense rules around NSFW art.


Common sense rules == completely banning all NSFW work?

https://www.subscribestar.com/prohibited_content

I'm all for having some SFW platforms, but let's not pretend that there isn't a dramatic, dramatic demand for NSFW content, and that banning it is nothing short of prudish.


No? Last time I understood from my artist friends who do kinky NSFW art (as do I), they use SubscribeStar's NSFW version, right over here if you missed it - (https://subscribestar.adult/)


I'm no fan of banning such things, but an outright ban is much clearer and more comprehensible than Patreon's very murky and subjective (to the point where it's almost impossible that they're not selectively applied, if only by accident) rules.


They have two URL's, one for adult content and one for SFW content. You're looking at the SFW rules


I don't think it has anything to do with common sense, from reading their guidelines it sounds like they just ban NSFW stuff all together.


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