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Danny O'Brien: Question on geeks and games
Merlin Mann | Apr 25 2005
As you may know, Danny O’Brien and I are rumored to be working on a book for O’Reilly’s Hacks series. As we theoretically toil with this theoretical book, we’ll be lazily turning to you smart people from time to time to save our bacon. This is the first of those occasions. Thus, Danny asks… So one of the things that’s cropping up in the research is that geeks hate boredom more than other people: indeed, more than life itself. The whole “rather gnaw your own arm off??? is frightening close to reality here. Given the choice between a fractionally tedious task that will save hours of effort, and something capitivating and challenging, we’ll bunk off the former. I don’t know yet whether that’s not something that’s applicable to other people. But I am interested in linking this up with another bit of anecdata, which is that geeks often enjoy thought games and puzzles. So, here’s my question: when you have a regular, mind-crushingly dull task to do, do you have a little game you play with yourself to make it easier? If so, what is it? (Merlin reminds me to include the canonical Simpsons reference in this discussion:)
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It's not exactly a game,...Submitted by Matt (not verified) on April 25, 2005 - 7:54pm.
It's not exactly a game, but if I'm stuck with absolutely nothing else to occupy me, I sometimes commit new (often more-or-less useless) items to memory or practice ones that I already know. That's how I ended up learning to recite the alphabet backwards and learned pi to 20 decimal places. The latter was an exercise to see how it was done, since someone else at my high school had learned 100+ decimal places. It was one instance where I didn't want to out-geek the other guy. It will probably never come in handy again, though I did get to use it once to humorous effect in an improv sketch. » POSTED IN:
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