Showing posts with label geekery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geekery. Show all posts

Thursday, July 29, 2010

links to writers smarter than I

At The Sexist: a fascinating interview with Courtney Stoker on Feminist Geek. [via TigerBeatdown]

In the narratives about Growing Up Geek, geeks often frame their geekiness as a disability; these narratives make it sound like the vast majority of geeks grow up without any institutional power, even when the geeks in question are white, straight, cis-gendered, abled, middle- to upper-class, and male. The responses to the oft-asked, "Why are geek communities so goddamn sexist all the time?" often begin with the special case of Growing Up (a Male) Geek. The narrative goes something like this: Geeks are smarter than everyone else, and ladies like hot, not smart, so geek men have almost no contact with women until they become adults. They’re socially stunted and bitter about their lifelong rejection by women, so they lash out at women to make themselves feel better. The cause of their sexism is their sexual frustration, not mainstream misogyny, even though many tellers of the Growing Up (a Male) Geek narrative will admit that male geeks often find the hypermasculine standard of our misogynist culture to be an obstacle to their social acceptance.
Brilliant. Absolutely effing brilliant. Sometimes the world makes me so depressed.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Whoa, did you guys know that Danica McKellar, who played Winnie on The Wonder Years, grew up to become a mathematician, and helped to prove a theorem in mathematical physics? She's on the nominee list for Wired's sexiest geek contest this year along with actress Felicia Day. Oh, and Joss Whedon. I can't vote because I'm too torn up by my divergent loyalties.

I love The Wonder Years.
*off to check if there are Wonder Years DVDs on Amazon*

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Compensating for under-posting by over-posting? You decide.

As of today, the library where I work subscribes to the database Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute Standards and Guidelines. We can all rest easy--FINALLY I have access to the resources I need to do my job properly.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Who's your daddy?

I totally just figured out how to properly indent a bibliography using CSS. Oh yeah-- I'm feeling like a pretty big deal at this moment.

That is all.

Monday, June 25, 2007

burninating all the peoples

Oh, rock. From thinkgeek: The Im in UR blank, blanking UR blank tshirt. With erasable marker so you can change it to fit any occasion! [I also love how the example thinkgeek has on their site is "I'm in UR medieval village, burninating ur peasants." Nerdy to the core.] I'm in UR internets, maxing out ur credit card.

Earlier post: I'm in ur...

Monday, June 11, 2007

The good news is, I can now name all 53 countries in Africa in under three minutes. It wasn't easy, but I memorized this list, and with some hard work and extreme work-induced boredom, you can too.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Stationery lust

Is it sad that when I saw these highlighters with built-in binder flags I felt the immediate compulsion to go to Staples, even though it was 11:30 at night, and I would probably get mugged on my way there, and also it's closed?

Friday, April 6, 2007

From RouterGod (don't ask): An interview with Jessica Simpson about open-source routers. "I really find I don’t have any time now for anything that’s not connected to open-source networking in general." This website has a whole series of interviews with celebrities about hardware and software. Amazing. From women we thought were vapid!

Thursday, April 5, 2007

fell in love with a drummer

I am not going to make an actual link there, because I can't endorse it (and I don't want them to find me in their search logs, if they HAVE search logs), but www.godhatescanada.com is hilarious. This website makes me proud to be Canadian. Fortunately, as long as we stay away from Albert we'll be safe.

Today I invented a library-themed death-metal band, Dublin Cöre. (Fine distinction between the band and the metadata schema of the same name, but try to stay with me.) Our first album is going to be called, "A New Standard for ROCK." I find myself very amusing.

dclogo


I'm going to karaoke tonight. Laters.

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Q: Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear?
A: Facebook.

Nerdiness quiz

[Score 1 point for each yes answer]
Do you/Have you ever...

  1. Heard of M. C. Escher?
  2. Owned an M. C. Escher desk calendar, wall calendar, or poster? (Add 1 extra point if the poster was framed, or if you ordered it off the Internet)
  3. Downloaded the Teenage Fanclub song by the same name because you wondered what it had to do with the artist?
  4. Read a Stephen Hawking book for fun (well, educational fun)?
  5. Know the correct terminology for the little LEGO people?
  6. Built a replica of a famous landmark, a Star Wars ship, a Frank Lloyd Wright house, or a classical temple out of LEGO?
  7. Built a LEGO version of an M. C. Escher painting? [A "yes" to this question is worth 1,000 points and means you win the nerdiness contest, hands down]

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Book Truck Parking.


Book Truck Parking., originally uploaded by Jeffrey Beall.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Diegesis, vampires, and gummi bears

From the astonishing bowels of the interweb: a fairly pretty chandelier made of gummi bears. Gummi bears are a good choice for lighting because they are sort of luminescent. On the other hand, you could just eat them, because they are luminescently delicious.

Yesterday James pointed me in the direction of some interesting theoretical math related to the vampire population in Buffy. However, this whole supposition is based on the idea that every time a vampire kills a human, that human then becomes a vampire, which (at least within the diegesis of the show) is patently false, as established in the first episode. "To make you a vampire they have to suck your blood. And then you have to suck their blood. It's like a whole big sucking thing. Mostly, they're just gonna kill you." I am linking to this article nonetheless, because I admire the amount of time and abstract thought that went in to it, but i think it constitutes a fairly radical interpretation of the text.

[Edited March 17 @ 11:11 AM to add: James: "I think the problem is that they have applied the zombie model to vampires." Jocelyn: "Exactly."]

weekend haiku
making scrambled eggs
and law and order c.i.
doth a weekend make.

more musings from the computer lab

Is it just me, or is "Wilson OmniFile FT Mega Edition" a database name that conveys very little professionalism? It sounds like something you would order from Burger King. "I'll have the Mega Edition, with a side of information."

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Because the young people love the Internet.

An interesting article, in which the author recounts his borderline obsessive hunt for the location and photographer of the Windows desktop wallpaper photo "Autumn." Autumn and the Plot against Me. [From VanityFair.com]

It is almost hard to believe that this photo is of a real place. Like all the Windows desktop wallpapers, it has a pervasive sense of fakeness. The leafy lane, the island with the palm tree, the green hill and too-blue sky: simulacra.