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  3. Suddenly reminded of all the slop artists who justified it not for productivity or efficiency reasons, but because they would "never" be able to create visual art otherwise.

Suddenly reminded of all the slop artists who justified it not for productivity or efficiency reasons, but because they would "never" be able to create visual art otherwise.

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  • faithisleaping@anarres.familyF faithisleaping@anarres.family

    @SymTrkl But again, lest you start feeling down about all this...

    Having Faith's brain isn't a prerequisite for anything. ANYONE can learn to code just like anyone can learn to draw or anyone can learn to wire a circuit breaker box.

    Also, the weird white man obsession with IQ and with finding 10x engineers is so catastrophically dumb. They use all the wrong metrics to decide who is and who isn't and it all ends up just being misogyny at the end of the day. The really good ones are quietly in the corner getting underpaid to fix all the mistakes of the loud white man idiots who think they're 10x engineers.

    Oh, and that's women's work, with everything that feminism has spent the last 100 years figuring out that that implies. 😩

    faithisleaping@anarres.familyF This user is from outside of this forum
    faithisleaping@anarres.familyF This user is from outside of this forum
    faithisleaping@anarres.family
    wrote last edited by
    #8

    @SymTrkl Okay, rant over. 😂

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    • faithisleaping@anarres.familyF faithisleaping@anarres.family

      @SymTrkl IDK... I have a weird perspective on aptitude.

      I've had to work through the reality of watching other people struggle and trying to help them with things that I find easy. It's not always a lack of effort or experience. There really does seem to be an asymptotic effect where people tend to plateau at some point.

      Like with what I do, both on the computer and on the math side, a lot of the plateau comes down to "how much complexity can you hold in your brain?" Some people can only think through 3 levels of abstraction at a time, some 5, some 7, some 15. I've watched it happen as we're talking about something and as we move up the abstraction tree, they seem to entirely forget the lower levels. Then I have to remind them of something down there and their window shifts and they forget the higher-level goal. It's a weird phenomenon to witness.

      But also, 3 is about all you need to be a perfectly competent software engineer and the vast majority of people have that.

      And even if you can't visualize 7 layers, you can often make up for that by designing better layers that don't require you to be able to think about anything more than the layer you're looking at, the one above, and the one below. That's where experience comes in.

      Honestly, the worst software engineers are the ones who can keep a lot of abstraction in their brain and don't have the experience / maturity to understand that they should still design for the software engineer who can't. Because they're the ones who build spaghetti code-bases that only they can maintain. And in reality, they can't either.

      So while I wouldn't necessarily say that anyone with enough training and experience can do my job, the notion that you have to be me in order to be a software engineer is total bullshit. 90% of what we do on the daily is a skill just like any other and most people have a brain capable of learning it.

      symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
      symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
      symtrkl@anarres.family
      wrote last edited by
      #9

      @faithisleaping No, that tracks. In visual art, there are people who can lay down their final lines on the first attempt; that's the "15 layers of abstraction." Most people can't do that, and as you say there seems to be a plateau affect for it. Most people have to work through layers of abstraction to draw anything, stepping through things like form, volume, lighting, before they can move on to the final detailed rendering. And the main obstacle I see stopping people from making art is not being able to immediately do the final render from a blank page, which feels uncomfortably like how I avoided assembly for so long because I couldn't write an entire game engine in it.

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      • faithisleaping@anarres.familyF faithisleaping@anarres.family

        @SymTrkl But again, lest you start feeling down about all this...

        Having Faith's brain isn't a prerequisite for anything. ANYONE can learn to code just like anyone can learn to draw or anyone can learn to wire a circuit breaker box.

        Also, the weird white man obsession with IQ and with finding 10x engineers is so catastrophically dumb. They use all the wrong metrics to decide who is and who isn't and it all ends up just being misogyny at the end of the day. The really good ones are quietly in the corner getting underpaid to fix all the mistakes of the loud white man idiots who think they're 10x engineers.

        Oh, and that's women's work, with everything that feminism has spent the last 100 years figuring out that that implies. 😩

        symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
        symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
        symtrkl@anarres.family
        wrote last edited by
        #10

        @faithisleaping Weirdly, because I know I take any excuse to feel down about myself, not so much. Mostly because when you were talking about layers of abstraction, I was thinking about how I'll be stepping through the debugger for that Microcorruption CTF that I do, and how I'll see values getting store to the stack or specific registers, and know on some level what the C code had to look like. And I can definitely see how, even if I understood everything top to bottom, there would be a point where I couldn't keep the assembly and an upper level abstraction in my head at the same time, but that wouldn't necessarily prevent me from understanding both.

        Besides, I don't need to be Faith because I don't want Faith's job.

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        willow@chaosfem.twW symtrkl@anarres.familyS anyia@lgbtqia.spaceA 3 Replies Last reply
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        • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

          @faithisleaping Weirdly, because I know I take any excuse to feel down about myself, not so much. Mostly because when you were talking about layers of abstraction, I was thinking about how I'll be stepping through the debugger for that Microcorruption CTF that I do, and how I'll see values getting store to the stack or specific registers, and know on some level what the C code had to look like. And I can definitely see how, even if I understood everything top to bottom, there would be a point where I couldn't keep the assembly and an upper level abstraction in my head at the same time, but that wouldn't necessarily prevent me from understanding both.

          Besides, I don't need to be Faith because I don't want Faith's job.

          Link Preview Image
          willow@chaosfem.twW This user is from outside of this forum
          willow@chaosfem.twW This user is from outside of this forum
          willow@chaosfem.tw
          wrote last edited by
          #11

          @SymTrkl @faithisleaping Just so we’re clear, I could barely follow what you just described about the stack or registers, and only at the most superficial level.

          symtrkl@anarres.familyS 1 Reply Last reply
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          • willow@chaosfem.twW willow@chaosfem.tw

            @SymTrkl @faithisleaping Just so we’re clear, I could barely follow what you just described about the stack or registers, and only at the most superficial level.

            symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
            symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
            symtrkl@anarres.family
            wrote last edited by
            #12

            @Willow See, this is why they should make kids use RPN calculators in school.
            @faithisleaping

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            • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

              @faithisleaping Weirdly, because I know I take any excuse to feel down about myself, not so much. Mostly because when you were talking about layers of abstraction, I was thinking about how I'll be stepping through the debugger for that Microcorruption CTF that I do, and how I'll see values getting store to the stack or specific registers, and know on some level what the C code had to look like. And I can definitely see how, even if I understood everything top to bottom, there would be a point where I couldn't keep the assembly and an upper level abstraction in my head at the same time, but that wouldn't necessarily prevent me from understanding both.

              Besides, I don't need to be Faith because I don't want Faith's job.

              Link Preview Image
              symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
              symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
              symtrkl@anarres.family
              wrote last edited by
              #13

              @faithisleaping Also, I included the GG panels as a joke, but they're also illustrative (hehe) of my earlier point. I can go over that drawing of Agatha Widlerizing a gadget at length, talking about the silhouetting, illusion of motion, eye travel, and the things that could have been done differently to enhance the reader impact. (Nothing against Phil Foglio, but he's a lot stronger at detailed environments and facial expressions than his is at conveying action.) And I think that there's something of your point about plateaus in there as well, because I personally have a really hard time drawing the type of detailed backgrounds packed with little jokes that are something of a Foglio trademark. And it's hard not to spin that off into "these artists are just materially better," which is just as icky a concept as "my engineering brain is simply superior."

              Whoops we accidentally invented auteur theory for computer science.

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              • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                Suddenly reminded of all the slop artists who justified it not for productivity or efficiency reasons, but because they would "never" be able to create visual art otherwise.

                Imagine looking at someone who studied and practiced for years to hone a skill, and seeing an injustice. Assuming that you are owed the results of hard work you haven't done.

                The fun thing is, this isn't new. This is the fallacy of natural talent. The uncomfortable minimization of our work as "you're so talented, I could never..."
                Like we just woke up and started drawing good. Spoiler alert: Everyone can draw.¹ The only thing "talent" gets you is speed of acquisition, because visual art is 100% a learned skill. And this holds true for every creative endeavor. The only difference between making good art and saying "I tried and I could never..." is that the former kept going. Everyone starts bad. Everyone has to learn and improve.

                And that, more than anything, is what infuriates me about AI. Even if it weren't objectively bad for literally every other reason, it enables this mindset that creativity is this utterly valueless thing hoarded by those of us born to be great at it. The mindset of "my neighbor's kid could make this for twenty bucks." The mindset of "I'll pay you in exposure." Of "I did the hard part of coming up with the idea, now all you have to do is write the novel." Of "why pay [a fair wage for a skilled artist] when we could just generate this with AI?"

                ¹ No really, everyone. My partner has aphantasia, the inability to visualize objects in her mind, and I've seen her paint from reference, give cogent feedback on my work, and demonstrate a clear understanding of form and space in games like The Sims and Minecraft where the visualization is largely offloaded to the game world. She's really good at art, despite a limitation that most people would say should make it impossible. Everyone.

                mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM This user is from outside of this forum
                mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM This user is from outside of this forum
                mindpersephone@spookygirl.boo
                wrote last edited by
                #14

                @SymTrkl dear goddess all of this...


                I've had people say similar things to me. You know why I'm this good at writing the kind of things I write? Because I do it
                a lot it's not some innate genetic predisposition to writing short horny shit, it's just practice. You should see my early stuff. I'm glad my Twitter account went away. There is some embarrassing stuff buried in the depths of that archive

                symtrkl@anarres.familyS 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                  Suddenly reminded of all the slop artists who justified it not for productivity or efficiency reasons, but because they would "never" be able to create visual art otherwise.

                  Imagine looking at someone who studied and practiced for years to hone a skill, and seeing an injustice. Assuming that you are owed the results of hard work you haven't done.

                  The fun thing is, this isn't new. This is the fallacy of natural talent. The uncomfortable minimization of our work as "you're so talented, I could never..."
                  Like we just woke up and started drawing good. Spoiler alert: Everyone can draw.¹ The only thing "talent" gets you is speed of acquisition, because visual art is 100% a learned skill. And this holds true for every creative endeavor. The only difference between making good art and saying "I tried and I could never..." is that the former kept going. Everyone starts bad. Everyone has to learn and improve.

                  And that, more than anything, is what infuriates me about AI. Even if it weren't objectively bad for literally every other reason, it enables this mindset that creativity is this utterly valueless thing hoarded by those of us born to be great at it. The mindset of "my neighbor's kid could make this for twenty bucks." The mindset of "I'll pay you in exposure." Of "I did the hard part of coming up with the idea, now all you have to do is write the novel." Of "why pay [a fair wage for a skilled artist] when we could just generate this with AI?"

                  ¹ No really, everyone. My partner has aphantasia, the inability to visualize objects in her mind, and I've seen her paint from reference, give cogent feedback on my work, and demonstrate a clear understanding of form and space in games like The Sims and Minecraft where the visualization is largely offloaded to the game world. She's really good at art, despite a limitation that most people would say should make it impossible. Everyone.

                  theartlav@anarres.familyT This user is from outside of this forum
                  theartlav@anarres.familyT This user is from outside of this forum
                  theartlav@anarres.family
                  wrote last edited by
                  #15

                  @SymTrkl Yeah, i consider "talent" a slur made to devalue practice.

                  Going slightly sideways, after i quit IT i kept coding for my own fun, and these days it is a form of art for me. An interesting side effect of it is that i feel similar about all the vibe coding as artists feel about genAI art, only with a bit less despair.

                  The saddest part for me is the motivation-killing effect of all the LLM stuff. I can still enjoy coding because i'm already good at it. But i given up trying to practice drawing a couple of years ago, since it doesn't feel like there is any point.

                  symtrkl@anarres.familyS 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM mindpersephone@spookygirl.boo

                    @SymTrkl dear goddess all of this...


                    I've had people say similar things to me. You know why I'm this good at writing the kind of things I write? Because I do it
                    a lot it's not some innate genetic predisposition to writing short horny shit, it's just practice. You should see my early stuff. I'm glad my Twitter account went away. There is some embarrassing stuff buried in the depths of that archive

                    symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                    symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                    symtrkl@anarres.family
                    wrote last edited by
                    #16

                    @mindpersephone You don't want to see the years of absolute trash that I wrote without posting anywhere before I started doing horny microfic on fedi.

                    mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • theartlav@anarres.familyT theartlav@anarres.family

                      @SymTrkl Yeah, i consider "talent" a slur made to devalue practice.

                      Going slightly sideways, after i quit IT i kept coding for my own fun, and these days it is a form of art for me. An interesting side effect of it is that i feel similar about all the vibe coding as artists feel about genAI art, only with a bit less despair.

                      The saddest part for me is the motivation-killing effect of all the LLM stuff. I can still enjoy coding because i'm already good at it. But i given up trying to practice drawing a couple of years ago, since it doesn't feel like there is any point.

                      symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                      symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                      symtrkl@anarres.family
                      wrote last edited by
                      #17

                      @theartlav The biggest failing of STEM education is that they let people keep believing that there's any meaningful difference between art and engineering.

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                      0
                      • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                        @faithisleaping Weirdly, because I know I take any excuse to feel down about myself, not so much. Mostly because when you were talking about layers of abstraction, I was thinking about how I'll be stepping through the debugger for that Microcorruption CTF that I do, and how I'll see values getting store to the stack or specific registers, and know on some level what the C code had to look like. And I can definitely see how, even if I understood everything top to bottom, there would be a point where I couldn't keep the assembly and an upper level abstraction in my head at the same time, but that wouldn't necessarily prevent me from understanding both.

                        Besides, I don't need to be Faith because I don't want Faith's job.

                        Link Preview Image
                        anyia@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                        anyia@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                        anyia@lgbtqia.space
                        wrote last edited by
                        #18

                        @SymTrkl yaay someone else reading GG!

                        @faithisleaping

                        symtrkl@anarres.familyS 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                          @mindpersephone You don't want to see the years of absolute trash that I wrote without posting anywhere before I started doing horny microfic on fedi.

                          mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM This user is from outside of this forum
                          mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM This user is from outside of this forum
                          mindpersephone@spookygirl.boo
                          wrote last edited by
                          #19

                          @SymTrkl oh I believe it. All of us have something like that and it's a requirement of getting as good at this as we are.

                          symtrkl@anarres.familyS 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • mindpersephone@spookygirl.booM mindpersephone@spookygirl.boo

                            @SymTrkl oh I believe it. All of us have something like that and it's a requirement of getting as good at this as we are.

                            symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                            symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                            symtrkl@anarres.family
                            wrote last edited by
                            #20

                            @mindpersephone "Your first 1000 paintings will be garbage."

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                            • anyia@lgbtqia.spaceA anyia@lgbtqia.space

                              @SymTrkl yaay someone else reading GG!

                              @faithisleaping

                              symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                              symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                              symtrkl@anarres.family
                              wrote last edited by
                              #21

                              @anyia Literally dozens of us. As I recall @RoseRaven and @theogrin are also fans.
                              @faithisleaping

                              theartlav@anarres.familyT 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                                @anyia Literally dozens of us. As I recall @RoseRaven and @theogrin are also fans.
                                @faithisleaping

                                theartlav@anarres.familyT This user is from outside of this forum
                                theartlav@anarres.familyT This user is from outside of this forum
                                theartlav@anarres.family
                                wrote last edited by
                                #22

                                @SymTrkl @anyia @RoseRaven @theogrin @faithisleaping I also used to at some point, but then the archive anxiety got the best of me.

                                symtrkl@anarres.familyS 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • theartlav@anarres.familyT theartlav@anarres.family

                                  @SymTrkl @anyia @RoseRaven @theogrin @faithisleaping I also used to at some point, but then the archive anxiety got the best of me.

                                  symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  symtrkl@anarres.familyS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  symtrkl@anarres.family
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #23

                                  @theartlav GG is one of those comics where I can only binge, I just go back every couple years and catch up.
                                  @anyia @RoseRaven @theogrin @faithisleaping

                                  theogrin@chaosfem.twT 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                                    Suddenly reminded of all the slop artists who justified it not for productivity or efficiency reasons, but because they would "never" be able to create visual art otherwise.

                                    Imagine looking at someone who studied and practiced for years to hone a skill, and seeing an injustice. Assuming that you are owed the results of hard work you haven't done.

                                    The fun thing is, this isn't new. This is the fallacy of natural talent. The uncomfortable minimization of our work as "you're so talented, I could never..."
                                    Like we just woke up and started drawing good. Spoiler alert: Everyone can draw.¹ The only thing "talent" gets you is speed of acquisition, because visual art is 100% a learned skill. And this holds true for every creative endeavor. The only difference between making good art and saying "I tried and I could never..." is that the former kept going. Everyone starts bad. Everyone has to learn and improve.

                                    And that, more than anything, is what infuriates me about AI. Even if it weren't objectively bad for literally every other reason, it enables this mindset that creativity is this utterly valueless thing hoarded by those of us born to be great at it. The mindset of "my neighbor's kid could make this for twenty bucks." The mindset of "I'll pay you in exposure." Of "I did the hard part of coming up with the idea, now all you have to do is write the novel." Of "why pay [a fair wage for a skilled artist] when we could just generate this with AI?"

                                    ¹ No really, everyone. My partner has aphantasia, the inability to visualize objects in her mind, and I've seen her paint from reference, give cogent feedback on my work, and demonstrate a clear understanding of form and space in games like The Sims and Minecraft where the visualization is largely offloaded to the game world. She's really good at art, despite a limitation that most people would say should make it impossible. Everyone.

                                    natty@astolfo.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    natty@astolfo.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #24

                                    @SymTrkl@anarres.family Oh we draw all the time with essential tremor, dyspraxia, and aphantasia

                                    And it's annoying to be told we're talented because we're literally forced to make up for our own weaknesses AAAAAA

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                                    • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                                      @theartlav GG is one of those comics where I can only binge, I just go back every couple years and catch up.
                                      @anyia @RoseRaven @theogrin @faithisleaping

                                      theogrin@chaosfem.twT This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      theogrin@chaosfem.tw
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #25

                                      @SymTrkl @theartlav @anyia @RoseRaven @faithisleaping

                                      More than reasonable, and to be truthful, I sometimes go back and archive binge for days at a time. Just like re-reading Narbonic! But even longer.

                                      There are a lot of details which aren't easy to catch the first time, too. And you can play Spot the Winslow.

                                      Still, it's a lot, best done as a long-term project if you want to catch up or start.

                                      [ETA] Back to the original topic, I too have this weird thing where my brain is able to immediately grasp the nature of a system, to make the leaps necessary. This isn't the same thing as having studied them, and nor am I anywhere near as capable as someone who has. It's just a neat thing my mind is wired to do.

                                      Does that make me better than anyone else? Hah, not in the slightest. Not smarter, either. It's just a quirk of the wiring. And I wish more folks could get that: I'm not a genius by any metric!

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                                      • symtrkl@anarres.familyS symtrkl@anarres.family

                                        Suddenly reminded of all the slop artists who justified it not for productivity or efficiency reasons, but because they would "never" be able to create visual art otherwise.

                                        Imagine looking at someone who studied and practiced for years to hone a skill, and seeing an injustice. Assuming that you are owed the results of hard work you haven't done.

                                        The fun thing is, this isn't new. This is the fallacy of natural talent. The uncomfortable minimization of our work as "you're so talented, I could never..."
                                        Like we just woke up and started drawing good. Spoiler alert: Everyone can draw.¹ The only thing "talent" gets you is speed of acquisition, because visual art is 100% a learned skill. And this holds true for every creative endeavor. The only difference between making good art and saying "I tried and I could never..." is that the former kept going. Everyone starts bad. Everyone has to learn and improve.

                                        And that, more than anything, is what infuriates me about AI. Even if it weren't objectively bad for literally every other reason, it enables this mindset that creativity is this utterly valueless thing hoarded by those of us born to be great at it. The mindset of "my neighbor's kid could make this for twenty bucks." The mindset of "I'll pay you in exposure." Of "I did the hard part of coming up with the idea, now all you have to do is write the novel." Of "why pay [a fair wage for a skilled artist] when we could just generate this with AI?"

                                        ¹ No really, everyone. My partner has aphantasia, the inability to visualize objects in her mind, and I've seen her paint from reference, give cogent feedback on my work, and demonstrate a clear understanding of form and space in games like The Sims and Minecraft where the visualization is largely offloaded to the game world. She's really good at art, despite a limitation that most people would say should make it impossible. Everyone.

                                        girlonthenet@mastodon.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        girlonthenet@mastodon.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #26

                                        @SymTrkl so so much this! As a writer, I hear ‘I could never’ a lot and it makes me sad. Everyone can use words, everyone has stories they can tell. The biggest differences between them and me are practice, and a drive to do it.

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