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1994-02-11
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2KB
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52 lines
THE MACHO NERD
There's a new breed of man around these days. I call him "The Macho
Nerd." The Macho Nerd is the high-tech guy of the Nineties who proves his
masculinity by letting the world know about his great computer system and how
much he knows about technology.
It no longer matters how athletic you are, how good-looking you are, or
how much money you make. All that matters is your hardware.
When you meet a Macho Nerd, the first thing he asks is "So...what kind of
system do you have?"
This is how The Macho Nerd sizes you up. Macintosh guys consider themselves
superior to Apple II guys, and Apple II guys consider themselves superior
to Commodore or Atari guys. IBM guys, naturally, consider themselves to be
above everybody.
I've met guys who were ashamed to tell me they still use an old TRS-80
computer. They can't even look you in the eye.
Real men don't use floppy disks, bytes are for sissies. Megabytes are
where it's at. The more the better. And the more desk space your computer
system takes up, the more of a man you are.
User friendliness is for wimps. Real men use hardware and software that
is so incoherent and confusing that Einstein would give up in disgust.
Computer people used to hide their hobby from the rest of the world like
it was an illicit activity. These days, you can't shut them up. Most
coversations, it seems, eventually work their way to spreadsheets and data
bases.
When it reaches that point, they like to show off their manliness by
spouting computer jargon. I know a few things about computers, but at a trade
show recently a guy talked to me for a half an hour and I have absolutely no
idea what he said. When he was finished, I felt like I had been beaten up
by the neighborhood bully.
The sad part is, it looks like The Macho Nerd is here to stay. Teenage
boys used to dream about driving a four-on-the-floor Corvette with 400
horsepower under the hood, mag wheels that could go from zero to sixty in
less than seven seconds and a good-looking blonde in the passenger seat.
These days, those same boys fantasize about a NEXT computer system with
four megabytes of memory and a Hewlett Packard laser printer that will go
from zero to 500 characters per second--and a good-looking blonde
telecommunicating from her terminal across the country.
By Dan Gutman
*** EOF