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How Dumb Was Your First Online Handle? [Qotd]

thymindmaymove:

How Dumb Was Your First Online Handle? [Qotd] via Gizmodo by Kyle Wagner on 6/29/11

Your criminal record gets wiped clean the moment you turn 18, but every idiotic screenname and angst-ridden Xanga remains in perpetuity. GOOD had a few online journalists (including our own Mat “emptyage” Honan) share their first handles, to amusing but mostly harmless results.

So what was your first (or most embarrassing) handle? [GOOD]

 

My first one was Technobrat. I am not at all ashamed or embarrassed by it. Then there was Greywolf, but that was too common.  I also used one from an Alphaville song, then DataAngel.  I bounce back and forth between DataAngel and TheNinth/Nine now.

Mar 8

REBLOG IF YOUR DAD IS A NERD

Dude. 

You want stories of him (and my mom) hanging out with science fiction writers? Or how proud it made them when I started going to science fiction conventions and built a robot?

Or how many books there are in my mom’s house?  Globes and maps and skeletons and fossils and astronomy charts and anatomy manuals and electronics and ancient issues of Scientific American and the fact that there are STILL 5.25” disks kicking around over there.

BOTH of my parents, man. I get it from both sides of the family.

They were also Goth before it was A Trend.

(Source: takenoverbyrocknroll)

If you were hacking since age 8, it means you were privileged

silas216:

azspot:

In other words, at least 75% of male CS undergraduates had parents who were affluent enough to be able to afford computers at a time when computers were very expensive. Clearly, enrollment in CS is a social product of class privilege, not innate ability. Furthermore, this implies that computer geek prestige is an indicator of class privilege, in addition to being connected to technical proficiency.

A child’s gender modulates how her parents invest in their child’s education, as mentioned earlier. For example, girls, on average, typically receive their first computer at age 19, as opposed to boys at age 15. Note that age 19 is no longer high school, but university, when undergraduates have already chosen their major. If women typically receive their first computer as adults, and boys typically receive their first computer as children, then of course there is going to be a gender gap in CS enrollment.

Computer geek culture generally ignores issues of class privilege and male privilege when it comes to computer access, upholding a ranking system that mistakes the social privileges of affluent white males for inborn geek inclinations.

A point I’ve made to those voices that wane nostalgic over /goodtimes of computing’s yesteryear, and lament over the metamorphosis that they myopically perceive has made computing less accessible.

A child’s gender modulates how her parents invest in their child’s education, as mentioned earlier. For example, girls, on average, typically receive their first computer at age 19, as opposed to boys at age 15.

My parents were awesome. I got my first computer when I was about twelve. And that was in 1983.