Okay, before I spend another 3 hours here avoiding actually writing about this stuff, let me take a quick moment to talk about the 1964 and 2000 First Things First Manifestos.
When I talk to people about being a digital arts major, I’m generally met with confused stares. It makes sense, “Digital Arts” is such a vague term that it seems to carry no inflection of what I do. In many ways I’m really thankful for this fact, since it also carries with it few restrictions on what I can focus on. When I was still in community college I leapt from Computer Engineering into Graphic Design because I felt that design would allow me a more meaningful means of interaction/communication. Like engineering though, pure design seemed to be missing something as well, sure I now had a means to engage people, but I had no substance to engage them with. After I transferred though, I found a means to backslide a bit, into a sort of middle ground between engineering/innovation and the tools of communication. So when asked what it is I want to do after college, I try to explain to people what it is I do now. Most think about this for a second, blink, and come back with “ok, but how do you want to use that after college.” Not having the words to explain it in terms better than “I want to engage people” I start to talk about how it can be used for things such as marketing. Is this the noblest