What if the future of humanities careers was not far from technology, but right at the center of it? For a long time, many people who studied communications, psychology, education, sociology, philosophy, literature, anthropology, design, social work, or other humanities-related fields have felt that the technology world belongs only to engineers, developers, or highly technical profiles. But today’s reality is starting to show something different: digital transformation does not only need people who build technology. It also needs people who can explain it, question it, teach it, communicate it, adopt it, and connect it with real human needs. In Colombia, this conversation is especially relevant. The country continues to face digital talent gaps while companies, universities, startups, and communities look for people with skills in cloud computing, artificial intelligence, data, cybersecurity, and digital transformation.…