My experience as a 28 year old former heroin addict is equally as anecdotal but contradictory. As preteen and teenager I was a big pot smoker and later cocaine enthusiast. I medicated throughout those teenage years but never saw opioid pain medication or heroin even though I was fairly deep into the NYC drug scene. If you had asked then if I would ever inject heroin I would laugh at you.
Around my freshmen year of college (2007) pain pills started showing up. They were an instant hit and all my friends start doing them. I explicitly remember sniffing my first oxycodone in my dorm and thinking "this is what I've been missing my entire life". My life spiraled downhill quickly. As a lifelong programmer / math enthusiast I managed to get to my second semester junior year before my lifestyle really caught up. By then I was homeless, facing serious felony charges, OD countless times, doing whatever I could for my fix. Oxycodone was around for a few years before they reformulated and then you needed heroin to get high. I was shooting it only a week after first trying it. For the next several years I went from a middle class college student to a IV homeless heroin junkie. I caught very serious charges and took drug court. Violated drug court 3 years in and then spent a year in a bad NY jail where I leaserned to fight and throw urine on people. I learned to act like a fucking savage. I got out and finished drug court only to get addicted again.
I finally got on Suboxone about 4 years ago. I finished my degree and went from homeless to making 6 figures in those years.
I'm literally the only success story I know. For most of my peers they died or are doing long prison bids. We all started from pills, and I can honestly say I would never have started if it weren't for them. However I recognize the need for them and don't know if serious restriction is the right way either
Wow... It sounds like you and OP are roughly the same age, and the same age as my youngest brother, who also kicked heroin addiction (he kicked it a couple of years ago).
What I'm wondering is if there is something generational here.
My father also kicked heroin before I was born in the late 70s, and since his recovery was such an important part of our life as a family, when we learned my brother was using, it shocked us, because it seemed so obvious not to do it. What I've been wondering is why the current crisis is affecting your generation more heavily than the ones between (or maybe I'm selectively seeing it in your generation).
Was it the easy access of oxycontin in the late 90s that finally trickled it's way through the culture and started a resurgence?
Was it some other factor (the fashion cycle that goes in and out every 20-30 years)?
I do know my brother was exposed to it from a friend around his age, and of course during a painful part of his life, but I'm curious as to the origin because I see how culture and influence work it's way though our lives, but I'd love to have some hints as to why heroin itself made such a comeback.
I'm a proponent of whiteboard tests and am in charge of conducting for potential hires on my team.
However I don't see how they guard against an outdated skillset? My company employees five Infor Sys21 RPG programmers who thought the term "web service" was synonymous with SOAP until I ran a workshop.4 out of 5 worked most of their career for IBM and all have bachelor's or masters in CS, EE, or Math. With a weekend of refreshing they would definitely pass a whiteboard for me (although not necessarily with the most optimized solution). They are all over 50 btw. And work slow and steady (but efficient) with no burnout in site.
I can come up with a "good" solution for nearly every question related to algo on leetcode and have very in demand skills as well as been the top SO poster and core open source developer on a Java platform that is #1 in a Gartner magic quadrant. At 27 and am on the verge of burnout that as happened as a result of getting large Adderall / Vyvanse scripts (legally) and being on the computer for nearly 14 hours every day.
I read this and I wonder if you will understand what I'm saying when I tell you that it is specifically BECAUSE proponents like you fuck themselves up beyond comprehension that I consider whiteboard tests to be a massive red flag when I'm interviewing at a company.
Your career should be a source of service, joy, growth and challenge for your entire life.
Don't destroy it for yourself (and others!) right at the beginning.
If you can afford to, take 6-12 months break, travel the world, meet new people, get some hobbies that are opposite of programming like model photography or playing/making music with multiple people. 14h/day behind the screen is pathological and you need to learn how to counteract it. You might get some peak off it, but it's short-lasted and won't help you in a career (if there is any long-term career in programming is another question).
Additionally many institution's gaurd against this by having systems that hide the security question from the customer service representative and only authenticate on a correct answer. If they are showing the "secret questions" to their entire customer service department you don't even need to worry about outside attacks because your organization is ripe from the inside
I can just imagine my mother getting flustered after reading the words "certificate signing (sic?) Request" and stop reading at "client certificate". I can think of very elaborate security measures. The trick is to make them sound easy and relatable to a ranch hand and 1960s housewife. These people smart but they don't have the same life experiences
It may sound difficult at first, but with plenty of help (step-by-step tutorials, etc.) provided by the bank, then it shouldn't be too hard to implement. It could be started as a trial for a certain subset of customers and then rolled out to larger and larger groups as time goes on.
Banks could provide an incentive by stating that using this is much more secure than just using a password, and that it's also largely automatic (unlike 2FA).
In school, did you ever do the "give instructions to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich" activity? I'm guessing not.
I'm willing to bet you could have a video with transcript and pictures of the user's exact home set up and many people still couldn't figure it out. You are dealing with people who still don't understand why you don't have to double click links since they have to double click apps and don't know the difference between Google, the Internet, and Internet Explorer.
People are often stuck with modes of thought and operation from when they were younger, and for many, that was pre-computer. At work, we got a hand written letter asking for support setting up their account because they were having trouble with their email that their daughter set up (despite ample support options on the site).
> I'm willing to bet you could have a video with transcript and pictures of the user's exact home set up and many people still couldn't figure it out.
I think you're giving most people less credit than they deserve in terms of figuring things out. Yes, there are people who are technically illiterate, but they probably still conduct most of their business in a manner similar to the pre-commercial internet days. That is, they either use the bank teller drive-through lanes, ATM, or go inside the bank to do banking business. They may not even try logging into their online account.
But that doesn't mean that the bank shouldn't provide options for the more technically literate users who either already understand the concepts or can pick it up with some step-by-step instructions.
I certainly don't like banks providing half-baked security solutions like easily guessable "security" questions or passwords that can only be up to some relatively short length and highly restricted character-set which can be brute-forced or easily obtained from a plain-text dump of their compromised database.
I don't think most users would have a terrible time. I think most users would not bother with setting up anything fancy, but could if they had ok instructions. But I think there are many who would absolutely flounder. As a technical person, I would like more security for sure.
"Security" questions should be gone. Everything important should be 2FA or have a key fob. I think just about everyone who has a phone and does online banking can understand "input the code we just texted you."
The key fob (or equivalent application on one's phone) is a better option compared to email/SMS based 2FA since the latter is not secure [1] [2]). The latter is still a lot like the half-baked security measures I mentioned in my earlier post.
I still think having certificate/private key imported into my browser as a one-time (or periodic) task more convenient compared to having to use a key fob or soft token from a phone app everytime I have to log in.
Around my freshmen year of college (2007) pain pills started showing up. They were an instant hit and all my friends start doing them. I explicitly remember sniffing my first oxycodone in my dorm and thinking "this is what I've been missing my entire life". My life spiraled downhill quickly. As a lifelong programmer / math enthusiast I managed to get to my second semester junior year before my lifestyle really caught up. By then I was homeless, facing serious felony charges, OD countless times, doing whatever I could for my fix. Oxycodone was around for a few years before they reformulated and then you needed heroin to get high. I was shooting it only a week after first trying it. For the next several years I went from a middle class college student to a IV homeless heroin junkie. I caught very serious charges and took drug court. Violated drug court 3 years in and then spent a year in a bad NY jail where I leaserned to fight and throw urine on people. I learned to act like a fucking savage. I got out and finished drug court only to get addicted again.
I finally got on Suboxone about 4 years ago. I finished my degree and went from homeless to making 6 figures in those years.
I'm literally the only success story I know. For most of my peers they died or are doing long prison bids. We all started from pills, and I can honestly say I would never have started if it weren't for them. However I recognize the need for them and don't know if serious restriction is the right way either