Geek must possess …
Flash drives: any self-respecting geek should have some form of portable device. And not only by one or two-you must have the whole collection of them. Then, you need to know how to partition on the Flash drive correctly. Your Flash drives must contain a collection of utilities for system and perhaps Linux installation or two.
Cables-lots of cables: as a field of different cables is great. Is not only useful in finding a replacement, in the event that the cable goes missing, but also you will have the cables for any unforeseen circumstances. You will probably find the field will be mainly composed of Ethernet cables, but it is good for wiring your whole House.
Remember to place the cable in your bag (either USB or a specific charger cable) only in the case of your coldest gadget, laptop, or otherwise sets of juice, or hooking the computer needs.
Home built PC: Nothing shouts Geek cred as a Palestinian computer. Not only are you showing how well you can navigate yourself around the computer, but it also means you must choose what goes in–faster RAM, memory, impressive graphics, and maybe more than one monitor, have only a few examples of how it was geeky homebuild. You must have only each screwdriver to and anti-static wrist-strap setting.
Soldering Iron: Because … well, why not? You never know when you’ll need to hack together some hardware.
Geeky tea (or two or twenty.): Probably will wear your geekiness on your sleeve–literally–geeky tea. Geek motif or motto or something to do with geek culture are all legitimate and potentially cool. If you’re looking for cool geeky tea, there are many online places to find good: pop + Shorty has several sweet t-shirts aimed at fashion conscious geek, and Threadless sometimes too sold some major geek-friendly designs.
You need to know
How to code: all geeks should have even basic level of knowledge of the encoding. Depending on what coding to find the most interesting-either computer programming or Web design–must be able to lay down the basics of memory. For example, if the HTML is your thing, you really need to know your img src of your href. If you know HTML basics–plus a little about CSS and how it works–you get bonus points.
Keyboard shortcuts: know the way the keyboard is quite useful, especially if the time comes when your mouse stops working and you must stop what you are doing and turn off (and we all have these kinds of mouse matters). Plus, keyboard shortcuts are Mega useful in programs such as Photoshop–save a ton of time.
On the desktop, the best of you will know how to rotate the screen (and know that not all computers can do this, since this depends on the graphics card), bypass the Recycle Bin, run the command prompt as administrator, or create your own shortcuts. Then there are all the neat shortcuts for the knowledge economy of the time in web browsers too (here is suitable for mainly IE users: type a word into the address bar, and then press CTRL and enter).
Courtesy: PCW
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