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At work we have a piece of A4 paper with the number of everyone in the office. The structure of this document is laid out in rectangles, by department. I work for the department that does all the technical stuff. That includes support - bear in mind that the support staff isn't educated in IT but just has experience in PC maintenance and providing support to a system we resell but don't have source code access to, project manager, team leader, a network administrator, a product manager and me, a programmer.

Anyway, on this paper, we are labelled as nerds and geeks. I did take a little offence to this, as much as it is light hearted (but annoying and old) humour. I have a vivid image that a geek is someone who doesn't go out but codes all day. I code all day at home and at work (when I have something to code...) but I keep balance by going out. I don't know why it is only people who work with computers that get such a stigma. No other profession really gets it - skilled, technical, or whatever. An account manager (and this is hardly a skilled job), says "Perhaps [MY NAME HERE] could write some geeky code tomorrow to add this functionality to the website".

It is funny how I get such an unfair stigma but I am so pivotal. In fact, if it wasn't for me, the company would have nothing to sell so the account managers would be redundant! I make systems, they get sold, and this is what pays the wages. It's funny how the account managers get a commission for how many systems they sell, or manage to make clients resubscribe to. Yet I built the thing in the first place!

On top of that, my brother says all I do is type stuff on a keyboard all day. Surely if I did, I'd be typing at my normal typing speed of 100wpm+ as if I am writing a blog entry. Instead, I plan as I code along on the fly if commercial pressures and time prohibit proper planning. I never type as if I'm writing normal English. There is more to our jobs than just typing code. And my brother is a pipe fitter with no formal qualifications in his name. I could easily, and perhaps more justifiably, say he just manipulates a spanner or something.

Does anyone feel underappreciated or that we have an unfair stigma?

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Is this light hearted humor in your workplace? – Mark Stock Nov 23 '08 at 0:45
You seem to take yourself too seriously. If it wasn't for you, the company would hire another programmer and carry on with things. Everyone is replaceable – Orion Edwards Nov 24 '08 at 19:48

10 Answers

vote up 17 vote down

No.  

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...because SO won't accept a simple "No." :) – Bill the Lizard Nov 22 '08 at 22:37
Yep. No it won't – GregD Nov 22 '08 at 22:37
Nice. That's a not-so-simple No, though. :) – Bill the Lizard Nov 22 '08 at 22:56
Sweet! Thank you! – GregD Nov 23 '08 at 4:13
Chicks dig geeks. – Simucal Feb 6 at 12:47
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You can thank those that came before you for the (now) unfair stigma.

It will take time for the technical community to grow out of the anti-social/ultra nerd stereo type (I feel like it's on the way out). Honestly I know a lot of people that I work(ed) with that still conform to the stereo type, so it can't be all that far fetched.

I feel like it just kind of comes with the territory, It seems like it obviously isn't true of you so no need to sweat it.

Also your statement that without you, your company would be useless is kind of egotistical.

Without people to sell the product your code would be useless, it's a team every member is critical.

Never forget that.

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vote up 4 vote down

I think that the being a geek has changed meaning in the last few years. While before most people were extremely distant from computers and could leave others mess with computers, today they depend on "geeks". I don't find being a geek derogative; if the person means to use that to insult me, well, that's the wrong person to hang around with anyway.

To me, being a geek means to be a part of large community of people who feel and think like me. To me, it's a positive thing.

Being a nerd is different: I associate geeks with computers. I perceive nerds, on the other hand, as asocial beings that even geeks resent. They are not productive in any way; they may be smart-asses, they may play stuff like DnD. Geeks may do that too. But nerds are the guys who nobody wants to be.

And many people already feel ok about being geeks.

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This just proves how subjective terms can be in different parts of the world. I've always defined "nerd" as the smart, brainy, math and/or science whiz. Geeks are just people who have an intense interest in a particular subject (Computer Geek, Sci-Fi Geek, History Geek, etc.). – Bill the Lizard Nov 22 '08 at 22:52
...but that's just my opinion. – Bill the Lizard Nov 22 '08 at 22:54
Great, and if you are both, you are a Neek or a Gerd? – Gamecat Nov 23 '08 at 8:43
Of course, you're a Gerk – Ivan Vučica Nov 29 '08 at 18:14
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Say it out loud! I'm geek and I'm proud! Huh!

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+1 for my first laugh of the day, at 3pm – Unkwntech Nov 22 '08 at 22:59
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I think (seriously) you need to do something with your own self esteem...

Seriously, it's "all in our minds"...

I am the "ultra geek". Does that mean I am not a social being? Well, I founded a company which was valued for $2.5MILL at its peak. I attracted investors, I went to evangelizing meetings and got a lot of attention. I headhunted people who would get jobs at Google easily with 5 times the salary which chose to work for us. I am now on my second startup...

But when it comes to coding, that's what I know, that's what I love and that's my gift. Yes I like computers more then humans (in general - of course this does not apply for family and such)

I look at myself as the "ultra geek" and I can do stuff with computers and programming most people didn't realize was possible...

Am I a geek? Well, yes, of course. Just like a "homosexual" is a "gay" and a "female homosexual" is a "lesbian".

Though these words only have (negative) meaning if you LET them have negative meaning, and that's where your self esteem comes into the picture...

Be proud, grow tall!

If you are a skilled developer it doesn't matter what other people call you, including "Geek", "Asbie" (Asberger) or "Rudolf the Reindeer". A good geek should know he is a good geek, and if he is then he is confident in his own skills and gifts and doesn't take these kind of "name-tags" negatively...

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I don't think the down-votes or the offensive flag was nesicary here, I think that the point was made and made well, however Iam going to censor it a bit because not everyone will agree with me. – Unkwntech Nov 22 '08 at 23:01
I upvoted, seems some softies find arbitrary discussions as if they were personal attacks. – Kent Fredric Nov 22 '08 at 23:07
seems that even after I cencored it, they are still voting it down, so I removed what I think is the most 'offensive' chunk of text. – Unkwntech Nov 22 '08 at 23:12
little children with their "offensive" term mindset. Magical arbitrary words that are "bad" just as a word!. What nonsense. – Kent Fredric Nov 22 '08 at 23:15
I agree, I edited it to try and make people happy because he made a valid point. – Unkwntech Nov 22 '08 at 23:18
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The average person regards "nerds" and "geeks" with the same view as a peasant does a hedge-wizard. They disdain them for not fitting in with their own world-view, but have some grudging respect for their ability to grasp things which might as well be magic, based on their comprehension.

Remember, you have the power. Use it to instill respect and fear, or to install NetHack on web server.

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vote up 1 vote down

It's Saturday night, perhaps you should get out more :-)

The hum-drum of the office may not look so bad when you are outside a few beers.

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he did say he went out – Claudiu Nov 23 '08 at 1:01
I know, and I said he should get out more. – Simon Nov 23 '08 at 14:56
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Those are just social science (or worse "Business") majors who don't know anything about anything and are secretly insecure about how ignorant they are. They're just the "teeming masses." I wouldn't worry about it.

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Hi guys, I couldn't help myself and wrote down a blog about my thoughts about this. I think way too many "David Stars" are being handed out generously today... :(

Read it here; Don't be a geek...

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Me and some of my friends call each other 'wiggas'. You can guess why. We is white you see. We don't mind calling each other a transliterated word that some consider insulting. If a stranger called us that wed be offended, sure, but otherwise..... – Kent Fredric Nov 23 '08 at 2:19
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I take it and make it an advantage. I've incorporated the 'geek' into my language in different ways. If someone makes a slightly derogitory 'geek comment', I might come back with "Hey, geeks write the software on your ATM machine".

When I've fixed things I might comment "UberGeek to the rescue" - I've been writing programs since grade school and I'm 46 years old. I joke that "the Geek Squad calls ME". And when I have a 5TB Windows Home Server with more Video On Demand than the cable company (You want a Doctor Who episode from 1971? Coming right up!) along with several other tech-solutions in the house and can apply some of that to doing something with my girlfriend (even if it's just some Google-fu), I'll say something like "There are advantages to dating a geek!"

I do break the preconceived notions of geekdom. I do shower, I'm not morbidly obese (though I could stand to lose about 20 pounds) and I've been married. I have a social life, though the ones my two daughters have put me to shame..

I'm certainly not like any of the caricature 'losers' in the Nerd Herd on "Chuck" but when you can build a computer form parts, you get a reputation. I just decided to go with it and make it a positive rather than a negative.

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