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Agree with the sentiment expressed by everyone here. You could always take humanities courses at your local community college just to scratch that itch of learning something that you aren't paid to do, or explore non-professional clubs and hobbyist groups about linguistics and sociology and such. It's what I intend to do once I get my computer science and linguistics degree in 4-5 years.
Here are some linguistic websites I browse + some that were recommended to me throughout my linguistic classes.
- Glottolog and Omniglot are both language databases with articles that are nice to read about.
- UCL Web Tutorials on learning Phonetics
- These two websites provide a nice database of native languages.
Maybe you can try computational linguistics? That is mostly AI development though, and I'm not sure what the market for that looks like right now. :V
You could always take humanities courses at your local community college just to scratch that itch of learning something that you aren't paid to do, or explore non-professional clubs and hobbyist groups about linguistics and sociology and such.
I wish my town had stuff like that available to me. I don't think you can take random courses at the university unless you're going for an actual degree, and the community college only has shit like accounting and other very businessy stuff that people do not learn for personal enjoyment.
Geospatial Information Science & Tech, outside of marketing/real estate/defense contracting, veers toward the humanities in numerous ways. Having a CS degree with development experience is a big advantage.