He got a field tech job after he graduated. Two years in, customers were calling and asking for him by name. He still cannot tell you the formula for a low-pass filter off the top of his head. He can tell you, on the phone, that the problem you think you have is not the one you actually have.
I thought about him this week reading about Jensen Huang on Jodi Shelton’s A Bit Personal Podcast. She asked him who the smartest person he has ever met is. He would not answer. He said the question itself is the wrong one now.
Huang’s point: the kind of smart we have always rewarded, the technical problem solver, is becoming a commodity. He used software programming as the example. For decades that was the smart-person job. Now it is the first thing AI is doing well.
So what does he think smart looks like going forward? Three things stacked. Technical understanding, human empathy, and the ability to pick up on what nobody is saying. That last one he called seeing around corners. It comes from data, analysis, first principles, life experience, wisdom, and reading the people in the room. People who have that mix tend to spot problems before they happen.
This is part of why I started doing oral exams in my Circuits class. A written test will tell me a student got the right number. It will not tell me whether they know why they used mesh instead of nodal, what a time constant actually means, or where the sign error came from. Sit them down and make them talk through it and you find out fast.
Most of what engineering school grades on is the part AI is taking over. Timed problem sets. Multiple choice. Take-home work that gets judged on how polished it looks. The stuff Huang is talking about, reading a situation, asking the question nobody else thought to ask, knowing something is off before the numbers say so, is harder to grade. It is also what is going to matter.
My old student would have bombed every test Huang is calling outdated. He read a lab bench the way some people read a chessboard. Twenty years ago that made him a good tech. Today it makes him the kind of engineer you cannot swap out for a chatbot.


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