A cynic might say they're only more agreeable because they have shed the veil of anonymity.Fappy said:Get along on the internet?! What madness is this!? I think you need to mass produce whatever you're smoking XD
Actually I wonder how many people who hate each other on this site would geek-out together if they met IRL. I guess the Expo showed how geeks are far more agreeable when they're face-to-face.
I totally get where you are coming from. Nerds can be weird and annoying, but I don't think Tito expects everyone to become best pals just because we share common interests. I think the point is that we should focus more on the positive aspects of our common interests, otherwise we may overlook those we'd call friends under different circumstances. That's the way I interpreted it anyway.JEBWrench said:Tito's article kinda bothers me; I for one do not particularly enjoy being talked at by people just because they happen to enjoy one or two of the same hobbies.
I think the internet has some chemical compound that multiplies the amount of testosterone and pure rage that a person has in their body by 1000 times.Fappy said:Get along on the internet?! What madness is this!? I think you need to mass produce whatever you're smoking XD
Actually I wonder how many people who hate each other on this site would geek-out together if they met IRL. I guess the Expo showed how geeks are far more agreeable when they're face-to-face.
Vitriol is the renewable fuel resource that keeps online communities powered.Fappy said:I totally get where you are coming from. Nerds can be weird and annoying, but I don't think Tito expects everyone to become best pals just because we share common interests. I think the point is that we should focus more on the positive aspects of our common interests, otherwise we may overlook those we'd call friends under different circumstances. That's the way I interpreted it anyway.JEBWrench said:Tito's article kinda bothers me; I for one do not particularly enjoy being talked at by people just because they happen to enjoy one or two of the same hobbies.
But you could bond with people over a mutual love of Shrek, or any one of the things you do like; no matter what, there are going to be people who want to talk to you about it and have good time doing so.shrekfan246 said:OT: I'm not so sure how well I would mix in, to be honest. I love games, for sure, and I know a lot about them. But I hardly ever watch television or new movies, I don't read comics, I don't watch Anime, I don't play D&D or other assorted P&P RPGs, etc.
I can nerd out about the television/movies I do watch, and I guess I do know a very miniscule amount about the most well-known parts of Marvel-canon, but the only things I can really go all out on with full thrusters are video games or music (and nobody likes most of the music I listen to).
absolutely. i remember at games day (Games workshop's big convention for their warhammer boardgame franchises), while just waiting in line to get some forgeworld stuff i just started a conversation with a group of people, and then some guys on the other side of the barrier (it was one of those zigzag ones) joined in, and we were all just geeking out about how super cool the forgeworld sculpts were, discussing army builds and tactics, fun paint projects and models we had seen, and all that good stuff.Anachronism said:Hear, hear. This is actually one of the big things I really love about comic book conventions: the fact that I can pretty much pick a person at random, walk up to them, start talking, and be reasonably certain that we'll have a lot in common. It's so utterly different from normal life, where strangers on the bus are generally ignored at best, and certainly never enthusiastically spoken to, and it's one of the things that make conventions so fun for me.
Not to get too off-topic, but I think they're talking about different types of "globalization." The "anti-globalization" protesters are mostly protesting global exploitation - where the ultra-wealthy corporations can feed on countries and cultures around the world world, but offer nothing back in return. It's basically a movement against pillaging the Earth's resources to make a few people rich.Greg Tito said:I know some people like to speak in hushed tones about the dangers of globalization, like it's some dirty word...