100 Essential Skills for Geeks
- bold – I’ve done it
- italic – I could do, but have not had the opportunity.
- Properly secure a wireless router.
- Crack the WEP key on a wireless router.
- Leech Wifi from your neighbor.
- Screw with Wifi leeches.
- Setup and use a VPN.
- Work from home or a coffee shop as effectively as you do at the office.
- Wire your own home with Ethernet cable.
- Turn a web camera into security camera.
- Use your 3G phone as a Wi-Fi access point.
- Understand what “There’s no Place Like 127.0.0.1” means.
- Identify key-loggers.
- Properly connect a TV, Tivo, XBox, Wii, and Apple TV so they all work together with the one remote.
- Program a universal remote.
- Swap out the battery on your iPod/iPhone.
- Benchmark Your Computer
- Identify all computer components on sight.
- Know which parts to order from NewEgg.com, and how to assemble them into a working PC.
- Troubleshoot any computer/gadget problem, over the phone.
- Use any piece of technology intuitively, without instruction or prior knowledge.
- How to irrecoverably protect data.
- Recover data from a dead hard drive.
- Share a printer between a Mac and a PC on a network.
- Install a Linux distribution. (Hint: Ubuntu 9.04 is easier than installing Windows)
- Remove a virus from a computer.
- Dual (or more) boot a computer.
- Boot a computer off a thumb drive.
- Boot a computer off a network drive.
- Replace or repair a laptop keyboard.
- Run more than two monitors on a single computer.
- Successfully disassemble and reassemble a laptop.
- Know at least 10 software easter eggs off the top of your head.
- Bypass a computer password on all major operating systems. Windows, Mac, Linux
- Carrying a computer cleaning arsenal on your USB drive.
- Bypass content filters on public computers.
- Protect your privacy when using a public computer.
- Surf the web anonymously from home.
- Buy a domain, configure bind, apache, MySQL, php, and WordPress without Googling a how-to.
- Basic *nix command shell knowledge with the ability to edit and save a file with vi.
- Create a web site using vi.
- Transcode a DVD to play on a portable device.
- Hide a file in an image using steganography.
- Knowing the answer to life, the universe and everything.
- Share a single keyboard and mouse between multiple computers without a KVM switch.
- Google obscure facts in under 3 searches. Bonus point if you can use I Feel Lucky.
- Build amazing structures with LEGO and invent a compelling back story for the creation.
- Understand that it is LEGO, not Lego, Legos, or Lego’s.
- Build a two story house out of LEGO, in monochrome, with a balcony.
- Construct a costume for you or your kid out of scraps, duct tape, paper mâché, and imagination.
- Be able to pick a lock.
- Determine the combination of a Master combination padlock in under 10 minutes.
- Assemble IKEA furniture without looking at the instructions. Bonus point if you don’t have to backtrack.
- Use a digital SLR in full manual mode.
- Do cool things to Altoids tins.
- Be able to construct paper craft versions of space ships.
- Origami! Bonus point for duct tape origami. (Ductigami)
- Fix anything with duct tape, chewing gum and wire.
- Knowing how to avoid being eaten by a grue.
- Know what a grue is.
- Understand where XYZZY came from, and have used it.
- Play any SNES game on your computer through an emulator.
- Burn the rope.
- Know the Konami code, and where to use it.
- Whistle, hum, or play on an iPhone, the Cantina song.
- Learning to play the theme songs to the kids favorite TV shows.
- Solve a Rubik’s Cube.
- Calculate THAC0.
- Know the difference between skills and traits.
- Explain special relativity in terms an eight-year-old can grasp.
- Recite pi to 10 places or more.
- Be able to calculate tip and split the check, all in your head.
- Explain that the colours in a rainbow are roygbiv.
- Understand the electromagnetic spectrum – xray, uv, visible, infrared, microwave, radio.
- Know the difference between radiation and radioactive contamination.
- Understand basic electronics components like resistors, capacitors, inductors and transistors.
- Solder a circuit while bottle feeding an infant. (lead free solder please.)
- The meaning of technical acronyms.
- The coffee dash, blindfolded (or blurry eyed). Coffee <brew> [cream] [sugar]. In under a minute.
- Build a fighting robot.
- Program a fighting robot.
- Build a failsafe into a fighting robot so it doesn’t kill you.
- Be able to trace the Fellowship’s journey on a map of Middle Earth.
- Know all the names of the Dwarves in The Hobbit.
- Understand the difference between a comic book and a graphic novel.
- Know where your towel is and why it is important.
- Re-enact the parrot sketch.
- Know the words to The Lumberjack Song.
- Reciting key scenes from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
- Be able to recite at least one Geek Movie word for word.
- Know what the 8th Chevron does on a Stargate and how much power is required to get a lock.
- Be able to explain why it’s important that Han shot first.
- Know why it is just wrong for Luke and Leia to kiss.
- Stop talking Star Wars long enough to get laid.
- The ability to name actors, characters and plotlines from the majority of sci-fi movies produced since 1968.
- Cite Mythbusters when debunking a myth or urban legend.
- Sleep with a Cricket bat next to your bed.
- Have a documented plan on what to do during a zombie or robot uprising.
- Identify evil alternate universe versions of friends, family, co-workers or self.
- Be able to convince TSA that the electronic parts you are carrying are really not a threat to passengers.
- Talk about things that aren’t tech related.
- Get something on the front page of Digg.