When I was growing up, the 80s, computers and technology was the realm of the geeks and nerds. At what point did technology become cool and what was the reason for the shift from geekdom to mainstream?
When I was growing up, the 80s, computers and technology was the realm of the geeks and nerds. At what point did technology become cool and what was the reason for the shift from geekdom to mainstream?
It's still Geeky today, you just need to get into a higher level of knowledge in order for it to be geeky. Otherwise, it stopped being geeky and "cool" when PCs really became mainstream and people started to have some what of a knowledge of them. Basically, around the time Windows ME/2000/XP came about.
Video gaming has hit the same way. Still great games being made to this day, however the days where being a gamer was something that was awe-inspiring and "underground" to everyone are over with. Gaming "LAN" Centers are shutting down, ISPs are overselling their networks and messing up routing, and games are becoming far more mainstream, as well as PC gaming kind of hitting a demise due to consoles but still going very strong. Gaming was considered underground especially if you played a LAN-based game such as a Shooter before 2004-2006, somewhere in that time line and you also owned a high end PC.
But to answer your question completely, it's due to people wanting to use them to try and help them do things more. This is the case of computers, especially now that the Internet has grown massively and everyone pretty much uses it. Gaming? It's the same way. More people are picking it up as hardware (even budget hardware) starts to speed up and being seen as "cheaper" for the power, and they wish to utilize it as an entertainment method.
Last edited by Smith6612; 07-16-2010 at 10:25 PM.
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Like I would say technology has gone from a wide range of just computers to phones, tv"s, gaming consoles and around 50% of the items we use daily. It used to be just coding too when it wasn't so user friendly. You had to use punch cards and know coding to run a computer, therefore only people who really wanted to leanr or felt they needed to learn were known as the geeks.
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I thinks it's because technology is now build for everybody. You don't have to know much to use iPad right. Evey other dumba** can use it. That's why it's so cool now.
Back in the days you would have to have a good amount of knowledge just to make you computer beep so you had to be a geek to do that.
The ability of the general public to use computers has not un-geekified computers; rather, the computer geeks of today have hoodwinked everyone else into using their extremely complex creations of hardware and software through simple, dumbed-down interfaces. To the casual observer, computers have become the standard domain of the ordinary human. But in reality, the geeks, being the only ones who can speak to the machines, have enslaved all of humanity to their will- not unlike the Matrix.
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It has become the way of all technology. Only the "geeks" first used the telephone. Only the "geeks" or crazies flew airplanes in the beginning. Once something is made that the everyday user can use it then it becomes mainstream. And this is honestly what was going to happen and needed to happen. To me, there is no point on having something that is only for the geeks and nerds. The better understanding that everyone has of something, the better.
On the other hand, computers can still be seen as geeky and nerdy. Building your own computer is seen as geeky. Programming is seen as geeky. Heck, even building your own website from scratch can be seen as geeky. There is still many things that are geeky in the computing world, it just has changed from the late 80s.
Also, if you want to see something that could be considered geeky is Linux. Yes, there are some distributions that are made for everyone but there are those that are not. Gentoo is one of these systems. You have to build everything from scratch from the command line. Again, this is seen as geeky. Though, this is also something I am trying to get away from. I am creating a website that will help people learn Linux and see it not as a geeky toy or something along those lines but as a useful tool that we can all use.
Overall computers are not seen as geek toys anymore because the everyday user can use them. But, there are still many things that are geeky with computers. So the geekiness has not moved away from computers but has just changed focus. I really hoped this helped.
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Computers have changed our lifestyle.I feel that difference between 80s and now is that in 80s computers weren't cost effective, so they couldn't be implemented for mainstream purposes.Thanks to improvement in hardwares and softwares as well, computers are not only cost effective but also they are easy to use.Initially computers were used in government sector and private companies.This resulted in inclusion of computer subjects in the syllabus of schools and colleges and hence they are in our pocket now.In present scenario geekness depends on which type of computer we use and how we use it.For example if it is a terminal in railway station used to query train status then there is not too much to explore but if it is a personal computer then there are unlimited fields where geeks can explore.
Last edited by bhupendra2895; 07-19-2010 at 03:49 AM.
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I used to play the original warcraft (a dos game) over lan and through IP address dailing
(back in 1995 you had to use phone lines, long distance costs extra so people mostly interacted with people in their town. To play multiplayer games you had to call your friend, ask for their ip address, call their computer, they would have to accept the call, and then the computers were connected)
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Playing computer games used to have the same nerdyness associated with it that playing pen and paper RGP's have now.
Does anyone here remember dialing into a BBS with telnet? Anyone know what a MUD is? Computers have come such a long way...
Thanks for comments ..
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