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Growing up geek

I’m pretty sure I come from a long line of geeks. While I haven’t done a thorough genealogical search, I’ve been given more than enough clues. From ancestors who built the first windmill in their small German town, a great-grandfather who attempted to promote Esperanto as a universal language, a mother who speaks five languages (one of which she learned as an adult in order to get better deals from that community), a father who built home computers way before the general public had regular access to them, and the list goes on.

Growing up geek was my inevitable fate.

Photo credit: Ethan Hein from Flickr

Photo credit: Ethan Hein from Flickr

It meant that by the age of six, I was staring at a black monitor with green text trying to hunt the wumpus. Does anyone remember floppy disks? I don’t mean the compact 3 1/2 inch disks. I mean the 8 inch numbers that you had to put in sideways. I’m amazed to think back about how little information could be stored on those gigantic disks.

In grade three, when the Scholastic flyers came out (this was a time when the flyer was more about books than stickers and toys), I bought my first coding book and promptly used BASIC to create a text adventure game. Pretty soon I was writing my own games.

Every time a new technology came out, I wanted in on the ground floor. I was the nerdy little bookworm with the retainer who had a secret language that none of her classmates knew about, let alone understood. And I loved it. While other little girls were imagining wearing ruby slippers and clicking their heels three times to get out of an imaginary situation, I’d be saying “XYZZY!” In fact, one of the first iPhone apps I downloaded recently was Frotz which has all those old text adventure games that I used to adore.

Most of my jobs have involved some form of web design or content production. I’ve come to realize over the years that keeping up in all areas is impossible. At one point, there wasn’t even an ability to produce graphics that weren’t just composed of keystrokes. Now there are whole jobs dedicated to graphic design. There’s simply no such thing as a jack of all trades in the online world.

For me, tools like Dreamweaver have helped to keep up. I can still get around in HTML, JavaScript, and CSS. And I can make changes to pre-existing PHP. But what I’ve really been enjoying lately is the way that social media has kind of exploded onto the scene in the past few years. Keeping up with trends, engaging in meaningful dialogue, and making real connections has brought a new level of online geekery to me. Maybe I’m making up for the lost time in my childhood where I lived more in my head and on the computer screen than I did with real friends.

This is all to say that while I’m standing at this particular crossroads in my life right now, I sort of feel like I’m staring at a screen with the question being posed:

“What will you do?”

And the answer is an infinite combination of possibilities. Insert response here:

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Discussion

2 comments for “Growing up geek”

  1. Great post, Geek.

    It’s so true, all the old lines are breaking down. It’s hard to know what we do anymore…

    That is literally where my blog name came from. When at parties and people posedthe silly 20th-century question: and what do you do? I never knew what to say.
    Then one day it struck me. I’m really a typist.
    So I said: I’m a typist, a gifted typist.
    Some people get that, some don’t.
    And that helps me separate the people I will like from those I probably won’t.

    Posted by Gifted Typist | April 6, 2009, 7:15 pm
    • Gifted: I love the name of your blog and the meaning behind it. The online world is really wide open with opportunities, I think. Keeping up with it and managing the trends that will stick around is the trick.

      Posted by Kimberly | April 8, 2009, 10:26 am

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