Aug 20

I was chatting with a friend today and I told her “What can I do? I’m a geek” in response to some geeky stuff that I said. So she answered me “Things like that shouldn’t be said in public!”. Well, honestly, people always tell me that but I, like most geeks, never stop saying it! Geekdom is more of a badge of honor we, geeks, carry on our chests. Yes, I’m a geek where is the shame on that? Usain Bolt is an athlete do you see him ashamed? Well, of course not, he’s the damn fastest man on earth! but my point holds! No use being ashamed of being what you are (Dr. Phil will definitely agree) just try to be the best at it! And that’s what the phenom did!

Geekdom is a lifestyle. It’s the interest you give to everything around you! That self-cleaning-thinner-than-a-hair polymer invented in Purdue University, that new MMORPG launched a month ago, the new features Sony-Ericsson’s new Xperia phone, just about anything related to technology. That doesn’t mean we don’t understand anything else, It’s just when like economists and financiers enjoy reading about what did Ben Bernanke do in the last Federal Reserve board meeting. Many geeks, unlike what people think, tend to know a little bit about everything and everything about what they like. The stereotype says geeks are anti-social which holds true to an extent. That extent stopped exactly before the internet was invented (which melted any sort of boundary anyway) I bet that the source that linked you here is over-saturated with geeks. Facebook, Twitter, Plurk, Digg, younameit.com … etc they’re all geekdom utopias. They’re a part of everyone’s life whether you agree or not! Geekdom is not what it used to be in the 70s but the stereotypes stuck around till the new millennium and beyond!

It’s a good time to be a geek, go 1337s!

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Aug 13

I’ve been Wondering if I ever been to a safari or not. Well, I haven’t and I can’t see I will ever be in the foreseeable future but, in anyway, Linuxing can be as intriguing as going to a safari. I’ve been using Ubuntu Linux ever since it was only a Dapper Drake (although either fictional or not living in a safari). I loved the operating system, society and embraced the concept and philosophy! I became an official exclusive Linuxer around Gutsy Gibbon when I gave Windows the axe and the boot out of my hard disk. That’s when the adventure started. When I decided to enjoy the mishaps of Linux. When I started to see the million ways The Gimp is better than Photoshop (you might argue it’s not, but embrace the philosophy and you won’t). Along the way, when I was upgrading and waiting for every 6 months for a Heron or an Ibex to come by, I was always thinking to wear a fedora or capture a lizard. Until it finally came, two months after introducing Ubuntu to my roommate, I was playing around with my Jackalope he decided to buy a laptop (Thankfully he didn’t need to pay the Microsoft Tax). He decided to try out three Linux distributions (Ubuntu, Fedora and OpenSUSE). I thought I should move on too. I downloaded OpenSUSE and, here I am, loving the experience. What I like the most is that we have 3 machines in the room and each has a different distribution of Linux and nothing else to be found!

What I also like, is how all three of them are basically the same yet so different. I felt a bit lost at first then it clicked all of a sudden! Am I going to play with a Koala instead of my newly captured Lizard? Let’s wait and see! I’m only wondering why OpenSUSE is the dark side of Linux?

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