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An underappreciated aspect of this is finding an academic department that would allow you to submit something this concise as a senior thesis. My experience, mostly in grad school, was that anyone editing my work wanted more verbiage. If you only needed a short, one-sentence paragraph to say something, it just wasn’t accepted. There had to be more. Jeff Dean is an uncommonly good communicator. But he also benefited from being allowed, perhaps even encouraged, to prioritize effective and concise communication. Most people aren’t so lucky, and end up learning that this type of concision will not go over well. People presume you’re writing like a know-it-all, or that you didn’t do due diligence on prior work. |
I _never_ got that feedback. My mentors all emphasized economy of language and nobody cared how "thick" my thesis was.
This is a pretty amusing story about verbiage.
Back in the old days, you would send a manuscript/research article to colleagues/friends by _snail-mail_ to get their feedback. You'd wait a month, and maybe they would mail a 'red-inked' copy of your manuscript back to you.
My Ph.D. advisor sent out a draft to a colleague who was famous for being harsh with the red-ink.
After a month, my advisor receives the manuscript in the mail.
* He turns to page 1. No red ink!
* He turns to page 2. STILL no red ink! [He must looove the paper]
* Keeps turning pages (no red ink!!).
* On page 10--in red ink--is written, "Start here."