Are we geeks?

Are we geeks?

  • 41-50

    Votes: 3 2.5%
  • 31-40

    Votes: 16 13.2%
  • 21-30

    Votes: 48 39.7%
  • 10-20

    Votes: 42 34.7%
  • Below 10

    Votes: 12 9.9%

  • Total voters
    121
I scored 21, which would make me an average male or female computer scientist.. not very far removed from what my actual day time job is..

But I was actually amazed at this relatively low score (say what?).. I thought my geekiness score would go through the roof, given that I continuously come up with stuff like this:
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showpost.php?p=141988&postcount=15
 
32 probably only because I can manage talking to other people. I don't like it but I can do it.
32 here as well, though I do enjoy chatting with others, usually after some initial resistance. Odd test, I thought, as I kept wanting alternate answer choices not offered. So I wonder if the score got skewed a bit from the way I responded with inaccurate answers.
 
24 - guess I am a little geekier than the normal guy. 😉

(BTW, the test construction is easy to read. I was without a problem able to achive a result of 48. Gosh! Does that make me a real geek again?)
 
Last edited:
I guess that if I suffer (?) from "sectagenarian synthetic symian syndrome" perhaps I need to get Monkette tested and professionaly evaluated for Asperger's syndrome. She never says a word when other's are around! She has a fetish for bananas...it gets complicated, but she seems to enjoy her multiple roles: political consultant, star of http://thepriceofsilver.blogspot.com, fresh fruit critic, riding shotgun in my truck, helping me pick up chicks, it's a long list...geeky toy monkeys?
 
Curiously compulsive (in itself revealing) to keep on doing the damn' thing, even though some of the questions were all but meaningless and others would vary widely according to how I was feeling/what time of day it was/how much I'd had to drink.

Right now, 14, so I guess I'm 'below average' ("Aha! So! Low self esteem!" -- "Not particularly. I often have an even lower opinion of others than of myself.")

Then again, I wanted to be a psychiatrist; made the mistake of revealing this when trying to get into medical school in the 1960s (a major barrier to entry in those days); and so read law instead, just to show 'em that a difficult degree wasn't that difficult. Admittedly I had to repeat my first year, but one term, I spent only 3 weeks at university...

Tashi delek,

R.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom