Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

I’m rich! And you are all losers

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • highwizard
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Jetf0rce
    Geeks are cool. I spent my entire childhood on a computer. Its kind of sad. I was always labled as a geek but now I get tons of cash. Being a geek has perks later in life. Athough I have no girlfriend.
    What do you do for a living where you make all this money?

    Leave a comment:


  • TwinVega
    replied
    Originally posted by octalpussy
    Ahhh, yes... those wonderful perks like working in a highly volatile industry, never knowing when you're next paycut will come... always praying that you'll survive the next round of layoffs... doing the work of five people just so you can remain employed... and the wonderful stereotypes, like "wealthy virgin who has no social skills". You mean those perks?
    I think those were the ones he was refering to...must be

    Leave a comment:


  • octalpus
    replied
    Originally posted by Jetf0rce
    Being a geek has perks later in life.
    Ahhh, yes... those wonderful perks like working in a highly volatile industry, never knowing when you're next paycut will come... always praying that you'll survive the next round of layoffs... doing the work of five people just so you can remain employed... and the wonderful stereotypes, like "wealthy virgin who has no social skills". You mean those perks?

    Leave a comment:


  • Jetf0rce
    replied
    Geeks are cool. I spent my entire childhood on a computer. Its kind of sad. I was always labled as a geek but now I get tons of cash. Being a geek has perks later in life. Athough I have no girlfriend.

    Leave a comment:


  • highwizard
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by c0nv3r9
    Hrm... I thought I had already posted something about how stupid this thread was; maybe I decided it wasn't worth my time.

    IT people love to call themselves geeks don't they... The word 'geek' is growingly as useless as 'hacker', 'inevitable', or 'terrorist'... just whatever people want to associate them with and use in their own self-serving fashion.

    I do not consider myself a 'geek'. I knew some geeks in school, I am not one. I may consider myself a moron for being so engrossed in systems, but that does not make me a geek. I am more proud to say that I am not an IT person, nor do I seek a 'professional' job doing IT 'work'.

    There are a lot of really intelligent, qualified people who can do the jobs better than most hired halfwits.. that are unemployed because others in 'IT' play the bullshit game better. Take many admins for example...

    It's all about individual definitions of words. What one person thinks is a geek, another may not. What one person thinks if loserific (mmm, yea) another person may view if being wickedly cool.

    Leave a comment:


  • highwizard
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by ch0l0man

    As for the geek label I guess that doesn't fit me I was far from being a geek, unless you call running the streets being a geek?
    Geek, Nerd, Dork.... They're all just names in the end. Just be yourself and be happy being yourself. That's all that matters.

    Leave a comment:


  • skroo
    replied
    Originally posted by ch0l0man
    As for the geek label I guess that doesn't fit me I was far from being a geek, unless you call running the streets being a geek?
    They're all labels. Best way to avoid getting one is to not be a stereotype in the first place.

    Leave a comment:


  • ch0l0man
    replied
    Well first off I would say that I wouldn't change my youth for all of bill gates money, money comes and money goes, but my memories are here 'til I die, well hopefully they last that long.
    I do tech support for a software company and you wouldn't believe all the IT people I run across a lot of so called admins that have know idea were the start button is at, lol. yes i support windows. There are techies and there are IT professionals. Techies go home after work and get on their computers for another 8 hours, IT Professionals go home and forget about computers.
    As for the geek label I guess that doesn't fit me I was far from being a geek, unless you call running the streets being a geek?

    Leave a comment:


  • converge
    replied
    Hrm... I thought I had already posted something about how stupid this thread was; maybe I decided it wasn't worth my time.

    IT people love to call themselves geeks don't they... The word 'geek' is growingly as useless as 'hacker', 'inevitable', or 'terrorist'... just whatever people want to associate them with and use in their own self-serving fashion.

    I do not consider myself a 'geek'. I knew some geeks in school, I am not one. I may consider myself a moron for being so engrossed in systems, but that does not make me a geek. I am more proud to say that I am not an IT person, nor do I seek a 'professional' job doing IT 'work'.

    There are a lot of really intelligent, qualified people who can do the jobs better than most hired halfwits.. that are unemployed because others in 'IT' play the bullshit game better. Take many admins for example...

    Leave a comment:


  • skroo
    replied
    Originally posted by Rhombus
    Your right, I'm not only not in "industry" but I'm still in skool. Your very mean though, could not imagine why you’ve been out of work. Dot Com? How about 1992-1993 when IBM and Zerox were laying everyone off in the Gilroy and Morgan Hill area.
    News flash: '92-'93 was the last big shakeup in the industry. It generally happens on about a nine-year cycle: 2001, 1992, 1983, 1974. It wasn't just IBM and Xerox laying people off, it was a lot of companies (though nowhere near on the scale of the 2001 collapse).

    Furthermore, as for the 'I'm so mean' aspect: consider that it really pisses me off to see people talking about something when they have no concept of the realities of the situation. Making it sound like we're all sitting around eating little pointy bits of toast covered in caviar while guzzling champagne and supermodels stroke us off as the school bully is run over by a steamroller is so far off-base as to not even be funny. It's much more like, 'gee, I hope I don't catch a cold this month because I can't afford a bottle of cough syrup and if it turns into bronchitis or pneumonia, I don't have any medical insurance'. Or, 'oops, something just went tits-up on the car and there's no way I can fix it and eat'. And then there's the ever-fun, 'fuck, I can't pay my rent; where am I going to live?'

    So, yeah. Having been there and having to watch some of my friends still be there makes me a bit touchy. Next.

    Leave a comment:


  • octalpus
    replied
    A "good geek"? How do employers weed out the good geeks from the bad geeks? Years of experience? Certifications? College degrees?

    Those of us who have been in the field know firsthand that any of those can improve a person, but they can also make someone who is otherwise worthless look really impressive on paper. It is a tough world out there, and the tech industry has been hit hard. There are some great people that can't get a job, because it's hard to express knowledge through a resume. You can show experience, schooling, and tests... but how do you show the years of inquisitive tinkering? How do you reflect what you've learned through playing around with everything you could get your hands on since you were 6? Two equal resumes are definitely not two equal employees, but the resume is what usually gets your foot in the door, and without something tangible, you're not going to get very far.

    I know too many wonderful people with incredible skills that are unemployed, or working in crappy jobs, barely able to feed themselves. The days when any idiot could make a triple digit salary in IT are over. If you want stable work and a good salary, go into nursing.... they have a huge shortage. If you want to do the work of five people in an understaffed, underfunded department, always wondering if you'll survive the next round of layoffs... constantly being asked to take salary cuts or unpaid vacations, just so that your company can afford to keep you, but knowing that you're doing work that you love... then... well... you're in the right place.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rhombus
    replied
    Your right, I'm not only not in "industry" but I'm still in skool. Your very mean though, could not imagine why you’ve been out of work. Dot Com? How about 1992-1993 when IBM and Zerox were laying everyone off in the Gilroy and Morgan Hill area. The Dots were not the first bubble to burst. I'm just a geek, and not a very good one. If I were a good geek I could have kept working in the Tech sector instead of joining the Coast Guard in ‘95, becoming a welder, and working as an ironworker, destroying both my knees, and returning to skool to do what it is I really enjoy.
    Last edited by Rhombus; December 26, 2002, 23:55.

    Leave a comment:


  • skroo
    replied
    Re: I’m rich! And you are all losers

    Originally posted by Rhombus
    I hear many IT professionals (on the tv) who were tortured in high skool and have now made it big, brag about how now they are rolling in cash and all the bullies are lined up at the methadone clinic.
    Wow... That is some of the most naive crap I've ever heard, period. Either you're just out of school and in your first 'industry' job, or sufficiently independently wealthy that you've been able to be completely oblivious to the fact that there are highly-qualified and capable people heading for two years' solid unemployment due to continuing fallout from the dot-com collapse.

    Having spent 18 months out of the last two years trying to find stable employment again (which, thank God, I managed to finally do), I can't imagine anyone apart from a pathological liar spouting crap like that.

    You can ask a 30 something year old computer geek about high skool, and you will more often than not get a long list of names and a description of each one of those persons personality defects.
    Big deal. Defcon, as a gathering, probably has one of the highest percentages of people with *serious* personality defects. It happens everywhere and anywhere.

    Do the high skool sports stars, bullies, and unattainable girls think about the geeks?
    Do you think these people if asked could remember the name of the high skool geeks?
    Once you're a decade or more out of school, I can tell you that it really won't matter.

    Leave a comment:


  • astcell
    replied
    It gives a new meaning to the phrase 'hair trigger'.

    Leave a comment:


  • ck3k
    replied
    Originally posted by astcell
    That link is a military doomsday device!
    the shine of blackwave's shaved head would destroy the ozone...:D
    Last edited by ck3k; December 24, 2002, 00:11.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X