My love of cryptography, data science, and signal processing is a direct consequence of my privacy and trust being violated when I was younger. A consequence of seeing information is power and this belief that the power of correctly predicting future outcomes can be mathematically modelled and surprises are variables that simply weren't accounted for. As I have gotten older, I have a much more nuanced understanding about personal relationships, but a primal drive to "solve" relationships so I don't get hurt is still there.
The barrier for entry in becoming a successful doctor vs becoming a successful software engineer is very different. The amount of struggle you have to go through in order to reach society's evaluation of successful is very different. I would simply argue that traumatic events are much more motivating and this ends up being necessary to stick through the process of becoming successful in a competitive field like medicine. I think the same exists in specific focuses of software development. I imagine some of the most successful cryptography experts were at some point motivated by realizing the value of having and losing privacy.
The most successful people in medicine and software development I know are the complete opposite of sociopathic. Becoming a billionaire is not how I would measure success. Being good at management and staying a c-level execute at these large corporations is a skill in itself. Whenever I come across financial success = sociopath rhetoric, I think about how my perception has changed over time regarding Ellen Pao, the interim CEO of Reddit. "Pao Effect" is named after her.
The barrier for entry in becoming a successful doctor vs becoming a successful software engineer is very different. The amount of struggle you have to go through in order to reach society's evaluation of successful is very different. I would simply argue that traumatic events are much more motivating and this ends up being necessary to stick through the process of becoming successful in a competitive field like medicine. I think the same exists in specific focuses of software development. I imagine some of the most successful cryptography experts were at some point motivated by realizing the value of having and losing privacy.
The most successful people in medicine and software development I know are the complete opposite of sociopathic. Becoming a billionaire is not how I would measure success. Being good at management and staying a c-level execute at these large corporations is a skill in itself. Whenever I come across financial success = sociopath rhetoric, I think about how my perception has changed over time regarding Ellen Pao, the interim CEO of Reddit. "Pao Effect" is named after her.
https://www.zuckerman.com/news/insightzs/inbox-pao-effect