ITT: We figure out the best careers for the very near future (i.e 2030-2100).
I'll quote an article from Future Timeline.
''Some of the new job titles becoming widespread in 2030 include the following:
>Alternative Vehicle Developer
>Avatar Manager / Devotee
>Body Part Maker
>Climate Change Reversal Specialist
>Memory Augmentation Surgeon
>Nano Medic
>Narrowcaster
>'New Science' Ethicist
>Old Age Wellness Manager / Consultant >Specialist
>Quarantine Enforcer
>Social 'Networking' Officer
>Space Pilot / Orbital Tour Guide
>Vertical Farmer
>Virtual Clutter Organizer
>Virtual Lawyer
>Virtual Teacher
>Waste Data Handler
It certainly looks like the Neuralink/Tesla/SolarCity/SpaceX block will dominate the private market on energy, space and tech, but that wasn't so obvious 20 years ago.
>>8876795
any new shit for astrophysics major?
Link
http://www.futuretimeline.net/21stcentury/2030.htm#career
>>8876795
Robot Wrestling Referee
>>8876802
Probably, that's the thing with the Musk block. There will be companies popping up all over the place trying to get ahead of the tech curve.
I can see astrophysics being huge with meteor mining ops and overall Solar System exploration.
Remote Sensing is going to be an absolutely huge field.
>>8876805
>Robot Wrestling Referee
There's gonna be a robot for that too, anon.
>>8876816
Huh, looks pretty cool.
>>8876795
>>Specialist
Wow. What a list
>>8876795
nothings really changed
those positions will still be filled by traditional engineers, programmers, health professionals etc, and some by AI all together
>>8876795
>Professional Buzzword Assembler
>Job Title Obfuscation Technician
>>8876826
Oh, it is.
And now that this shit is finally getting privatized on a large scale through microsats, the real fun begins. Pic related are a couple of sats (Planet doves) being launched by ISS
>>8876870
This. Body part makers will only be mechanic, materials and electric engineers with some specialization. It's not like any of those careers will create an entire new field for science so there are new degrees.
The only thing that it's actually gonna change is that everyone (even humanities majors) will have to know at least some programming, like everyone needs to know how to read and write now.
>>8876908
>apply for content writer position at some artsy zine
>get past phone interview and asked to meet with team leader and panel at a local fair-trade-squatter-owned bistrotheque
>spend evenings leading up to the panel shin-dig-terview practicing my non problematic dance moves
>buy a new pair of chinos just for this
>arrive fashionably early
>panel is an assortment of nonbinary proletarivolk with complementary hues of hair
>keep the squash fettuccini in my pockets
>order a round of shaken iced hemp-moccachino
>get jiggy with some of the panel on the dance-space
>"if you were an animal, which animal would you be?"
>"a leaf."
>hitting all the right notes
>project manager motions to stop the party
>xzhe gestures to one of the peons
>zwhie retreats into the back
>a tense moment of silence
>zwhie comes back with a blackboard
I'll admit I was shitting myself, but it wasn't too bad.
>asked to sieve of Eratosthenes using c++98 representing each prime as a class, each prime converted to base-seven stored as a Vector of bools and output as a String
>but just for primes under 1 million
>>8876998
Not bad