Current PhD student in Materials Science at Carnegie Mellon University. Co-founder of High Impact Engineers. Background in materials science and mechanical engineering. Also chat to me about community building, career decisions, etc.
Jessica Wen šø
AnĀnouncĀing the new DirecĀtor of EA UK
Thank you Karla!
Thank you Marie! Wishing you all the best with High Impact Medicine <3
Apologies, only just saw this! Computer hardware engineering definitely seems like a very worthwhile and impactful career choice. Some resources on becoming a computer hardware engineer:
- What does it mean to become an expert in AI hardware? ā EA Forum
- Lennart Heimās resources (he used to be a computer engineer and now works at RAND. HI-Eng also interviewed him in our podcast, where we discussed his career trajectory)
- Onni Aarneās writeup on advice and resources for getting into compute governance
Hope these are useful! Feel free to book a career conversation with us to chat more about your career plans and we can go further in depth :)
High ImĀpact EngĀineers is TranĀsiĀtionĀing to a VolĀunĀteer-Led Model
Thanks for your comment Ulrik! Some thoughts on your bullet points:
- I think there probably are opportunities to do biosecurity work in LMICs (e.g. Africa CDCās Biosafety and Biosecurity initiative, the Southeast Asia Strategic Multilateral Dialogue on Biosecurity) but these seem mostly policy-based rather than focused on technical interventions (likely because thereās just more private and public money for developing technical interventions in high-income countries).
- 80k mentioned that they would be adding more technical governance jobs (i.e., more roles in semiconductors/āchips) in the near future, so hopefully the geographical bias might shift somewhat. However, my intuition is that the US will continue to be a hotspot for jobs in this sector because of the sheer size and concentration of semiconductor companies (and maybe because of the higher likelihood of actually affecting governance/āregulations/āstandards?)
- We did some mapping of engineering disciplines to cause areas, which you can see here and on our Resource Portal (it is by no means comprehensive ā we even miss out nuclear!) Turns out mechanical engineers are pretty useful in a lot of cause areas. Hope thatās helpful!
An AnalĀyĀsis of EngĀineerĀing Jobs on the 80,000 Hours Job Board
How EngĀineers can ConĀtribute to Progress Studies
How EngĀineers can ConĀtribute to Global Heath and Development
Thanks for this interesting series! Iāve also been subscribed to The Global Prosperity Instituteās newsletter, which releases interesting analyses of different approaches/āpolicies to increase growth. At least one of the founders is a long-time EA, and the analyses are interesting to read!
As much as I love the summaries from the summary bot, I think this one missed the mark. The reason why we talk with people 1 to 1 about whether they should do a PhD is because there is so much nuance and variation depending on personal fit, career goals, industry circumstances, impact goals, etc. This summary does a bad job at conveying these nuances.
For example, point 2 mentions that doing a PhD limits finances, which is a short-sighted way of putting it, especially considering that over a lifetime, PhDs make back the earnings that they lose over the time that they are doing a PhD, and jobs requiring a PhD are often much more highly paid.
Point 3 feels pretty blanket-statement-y about scaring away employers when really there is only a minority of employers who are scared away (they probably wonāt be if youāre willing to take the pay that theyāre offering).
Point 6 also feels too strongly worded ā I donāt think you can ever know if there are no better impact opportunities. Also, not everyone wants to go into entrepreneurship so this last consideration wouldnāt apply.
I know this summary is AI-generated but I think a more nuanced and less strongly worded summary could be created.
To Do a PhD, or Not to Do a PhD: That is the Question
Thank you for your positive feedback! I am not aware of a particular directory of these experts, but Iād be happy to connect you to our contacts working on reducing nuclear risks.
How EngĀineers can ConĀtribute to ReĀducĀing the Risks from NuĀclear War
Thanks for linking to HI-Eng! We do in fact recommend HVAC as an impactful career for people who want to work on Indoor Air Quality to slow pandemic spread. Itās great to hear about the experience of an actual HVAC engineer!
I think itās commendable that you shop at charity shops and donate proceeds from selling items, and that youāre thinking about their effectiveness. I think these charities that run shops in the UK are unlikely to rank highly on cost-effectiveness because they probably score quite low on the Neglectedness aspect (theyāre recognisable brands, which means that more people are likely to know them and therefore donate to them), and a lot of these charities do local community work (and therefore tends to be less cost-effective than funding charity work overseas).
My approach when I buy clothes and other stuff from charity shops is mostly to reduce the harm from buying this stuff new rather than to contribute to a specific charity. Interested in your thoughts!
As someone who studied materials science, I enjoyed this post and appreciated the effort you spent on making technical work legible for laypeople.
As a general comment, I would like to see a technical/āmechanistic breakdown of other threat models for how AI could cause doom very soon ā I would be surprised if this was the only example of a theoretical threat that is practically very unlikely/ābottlenecked due to engineering reasons.
Congratulations George! After my recent visit to China (my first since I went vegan) I was truly blown away by how convincing a lot of the tofu meat substitutes are. Even my meat-eating brother was surprised. Iām glad that youāre trying to bring this to Western audiences!
I will note that the UK e-book is not free, but I coughed up the Ā£1.63 for it anyway ;)Perhaps this isnāt the place to discuss this, but despite the excellent fake meats in China, they really havenāt taken off and meat consumption and production are at an all-time high. How much better do meat substitutes have to be for people to choose them over animal meat?
This is fantastic news!
Hi Vincent, thanks for your comment! Unfortunately, the org is no longer running but I am happy to talk to engineers 1-1. Feel free to send me a private message and we can set something up!
As for the website, there is something in the works for a more evergreen, cheaper resource hub but that probably wonāt be up and running for a while.