Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes 361
loconet writes "The BBC reports that a report by Demos says that the all-consuming passions of geeks and nerds may actually be beneficial for society. The UK think tank's report published today, underlines the importance of 'Pro-Ams' -- amateurs who pursue a hobby or pastime, in many cases an all-consuming passion, to a professional standard. The report says Pro-Am astronomers have made 'significant contributions' to the knowledge of the universe, while Pro-Am computer programmers are providing the only serious challenge to Microsoft's dominance of personal computing."
Of course... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Of course... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Of course... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Of course... (Score:3, Funny)
Ok then... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ok then... (Score:4, Funny)
Its in the wash. Your mother got tired of the smell comming from your room (or as you call it, your fortress of solitude) and had to clean it.
Re:Ok then... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ok then... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ok then... (Score:5, Funny)
Ohh let me guess, you'd rather look angsty in an art house theater while you wait for the second showing of the classic 1940's La Femme avec le fromage, sub-titled in Hindi for the hard of thinking.
Hey look!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Look everyone, it's the head of Disney Animation!
The Incredibles is one of the best movies in recent memory - just in case someone was reading and decided to go with your wierd grinchy opinion instead of something like a 96% rating at RottenTomatoes [rottentomatoes.com].
Re:Ok then... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ok then... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ok then... (Score:2)
Re:Ok then... (Score:2)
Where's my damn cape then?
Come on, we all know that superheros with capes never come to a good end [imdb.com]. ;)
(Sorry, just saw that movie and thought it was awesome... if you haven't seen it, you won't get the above.)
Re:Ok then... (Score:3, Informative)
No. If you read Watchmen 20 years ago you'll also get it [devermore.net]. (Towards the end of page)
It's interesting that movie versions of both Fantastic Four and Watchmen are in development, immediately after The Incredibles made such a big show of borrowing/stealing major elements from those stories. Many viewers next year could make the wrong assumption about who is copying from who.
Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:2)
Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes
...but decided they prefered the Silver Age ones.
Re:Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah... I should've read the class description a little better before starting my geek character:
INT +10WIS +4
CHA -7
STR -5
DEX -2
Re:Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:4, Funny)
Although I'm also a bit frightened by the fact that I read your post and thought "wait, what's his CON" before I laughed.
Re:Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:5, Funny)
Just add a catch() statement and you'll be fine.
Re:Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:2)
But that will only allow you to catch the exceptional ones, and they are few and far between.
Yaz.
Re:Open Source Geeks Considered Modern Heroes (Score:5, Funny)
Uh... that's contradictory (Score:4, Funny)
And no, Anime DOESN'T COUNT.
D'uh (Score:2)
At the top, are the professionals (and the large companies, governments, and institutions to support them)
At the bottom are those who have an interest but no means to carry out their interest due to high barriers of entry.
That leaves room in the middle for us, the pro-ams. Most of us won't find the "next best thing", but a FEW of us will. That's pretty cool.
Am-Pros (Score:5, Funny)
Yup, I've known a few.
Re:Am-Pros (Score:2)
It is also true that this is the source of tremendous creative value. When the Ams go Pro, they can devote all their energy to their passions.
Re:Am-Pros (Score:2)
Its not the "nature of higher pursuits" that forces you to develop so you can pay the rent.
Its that your aren't good of a poet/philosopher/historian/candlestick-maker to get paid enough to pay the rent.
Re:Am-Pros (Score:2)
Not to be frivolous (Score:2)
Unappreciated by the opposite sex (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Unappreciated by the opposite sex (Score:2)
There's really nothing that can make us that socially different in our industry... not so much different as accountants that might spend 11 hours a day in a cube, or evil Ms. Wench in grade school that you might've had in first grade. Everyone I work w
Re:Unappreciated by the opposite sex (Score:2)
Its a big stereo type. People think "computer industry" and lump together all the antisocial Evercrack nerds, tie wearing MCSEs, cheeto-covered "Linux Hacker", and the guys who sit around in jeans & Tshirts getting real work done.
Re:Unappreciated by the opposite sex (Score:5, Insightful)
1. They're morons.
2. They're trying to be funny to karma whore, having not read the explicit instructions stating that "funny" does not improve your karma.
Let me turn off the spin and give you a no-shiatter. It's had to explain in a tiny little window, but eh, I'll give it a shot and hope that you get some understanding.
The truth is that we do stuff that most people can't understand. I'm smarter than most of the people I know. (The same probably holds true for most of the people on
I program VHF transmitters that track animals, wildlife, and assets via GPS and broadcast those co-ordinates up to 20 km away. I primarily use C, but my day-to-day routine also requires HTML, Visual Basic, and Assembly. I've also got a hand in designing the circuit boards.
I'm sure everyone on
"How's it going? I haven't seen you for a long time."
"Oh, I'm now running the gas station. How about you?"
"Good, I'm an Electrical Engineer, etc."
So where does that leave them? Exactly where they are. We're generally richer, having better health coverage, nicer vehicles, more attractive spouses, bigger houses, etc. In all respects, we're better off.
Now, I'm not elitist. I don't think that I'm better than any other person, and I think that with the same training and ambition, just about anybody could learn to do this job. (I mean, hell, *I* figured this out, so how hard can it be, right?
So what do they have left? Ridicule us based on a sterotype that may not apply. This holds true in the media - look at how geeks are portrayed. It's always someone with big glasses, greasy hair, and clothes that don't quite fit right. To round off the stereotype, the typical geek is shy and awkward around women, and has a voice that's barely audible. When geeks are portrayed as cool, it's so over the top that it's ridiculous. Take the Matrix (please!). They're running around in skin-tight leather, trenchcoats, and sunglasses. It doesn't even make sense, but that's what we've got. The media either portrays us as loner dorks who sit in messy rooms and order pizza on a Saturday night or as rejects from a leather fetish bar who can't work a dryer.
The problem is that it's just not cool to be smart. You can buy expensive clothes, you can buy a cell phone, you can listen to the latest bads (and buy their CDs and cereal and posters!) but you can't buy a bigger brain. If you could, they'd tell you that you need an IQ of 222 to be cool.
I wear contacts, I shower regularly, and a lot of my stuff is tailored. (Well, my jeans aren't, but they're women's jeans and I'm a guy. What can I say? I biked to university and ended up with pretty big legs - normal guy's jeans don't fit.) I was in a choir for 10 years, and I have a pretty strong and projecting voice. "It goes right to the heart," was how one person described it.
I've been married for six and a half years, and I've got a fantastic 10-month old daughter.
Re:Unappreciated by the opposite sex (Score:3, Informative)
I think there's something to the "geeks can't get laid" thing. In high school and college, getting laid (or a steady relationship, or popularity) is most people's primary objective. One popular strategy is lifting yourself up by putting others down. Geeks, though, they actually spend a substantial fraction of their time getting educated. Since they don't dedica
Re:Unappreciated by the opposite sex (Score:2)
Yay for us! (Score:2, Interesting)
(rolls eyes)
A Troll article? (Score:5, Insightful)
Come on folks. Only on select sites such as this one are people like those mentioned in the article considered heroes. Joe Average, as a rule, doesn't even know what Open Source is let alone that it exists.
Maybe, possibly, though unlikely, some time in the future those who have contributed might be recognized for their efforts (such as Linus) in hindsight but I'm not holding my breath.
Re:A Troll article? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think that we could say that even though most people don't know about Open Source "heros" that what these people do on a daily basis ends up impacting everyone else even if only indirectly.
If it wasn't for the rise of Linux who knows where MSFT would be heading...
Re:A Troll article? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a graduate student. I do computational biology research, as do many of my colleagues. I know scores of people who are involved in genome analysis, drug design, and fundamental forms of biomedical research. And when you look at the tools that we use, you find that we're increasingly dependent upon open source software -- from operating systems to compilers to scripting languages, our work is fundamentally enabled by the efforts of hundreds of thousands of volunteers.
It's quite humbling, actually. I probably couldn't do my research without open source. At the very least, the people who pay me probably couldn't afford to pay the same number of students/faculty/staff if they had to shell out for millions of dollars in proprietary software (to say nothing of the compatability problems that proprietary software usually creates).
The people who develop open source software help to make biomedical research possible. Is that heroism? I don't know, but it's certainly not a trivial thing....
Heroism is in the eye of the beholder (Score:2)
The future belongs to those who own the Net. The Net belongs to a culture; it always has, and always will. The culture is bigger than goverments, stronger than armies, and yet listens to the tiniest whisper of knowledge, wisdom, or freedom.
The future belongs to us. We will choose as our heroes those who inform us, inspire us, and remind us of our best selves. They struggle against the forces who would keep us ignorant, cowed, and small.
It is not only the well-known who will be our heroes. A hero stru
Re:A Troll article? (Score:2)
You're right, if someone's selfless accomplishments aren't immediately splashed across Page One of some newsrag, that person ISN'T a hero.
Case closed.
In case you can't tell, this is sarcasm.
I Am (Score:2)
The only thing new... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd say that the only "new" thing about professional amateurs is that the Internet allows them to publicise their work earlier, allowing us to take advantage of genius before the person dies.
Whether this marginalizes them by forcing them down the conventional paths by responding to feedback from their peers, where previously an amateur would have less feedback and explore the non-utilitarian aspects of an idea, or allows the amateur to expand their idea by meeting more of their ilk, is up for grabs.
Any ideas?
Yes, I have an idea, let's mod you insightful. (Score:3, Insightful)
Freedom of ideas, freedom of communication, these are the enemies of corporate-managed countries.
I'm surprised the Internet has even been able to proliferate and circumvent most educational and class barriers (although there are still lots of people who cannot access the Internet)
One of my "hot buttons" (Score:5, Insightful)
KFG
why are people who work on Open Source (Score:3, Interesting)
don't people do both? i know i do, so does that mean only projects where money involved are "professional" and OSS is "amateurs"?
that is just assinine
Re:why are people who work on Open Source (Score:5, Insightful)
professional n.
I believe that the first two definitions of each word were close to the original meaning, and only later, sadly, the third meaning developed as a connotation. And the first two definitions of amateur capture the typical open-source developer pretty well.
After all, amateur stems from Latin amare, meaning to love. So an amateur coder is somebody who loves to code. The upshot: Don't get upset if somebody is calling you an amateur, just smile :D
Am I a professional amateur? (Score:2)
That's great news! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That's great news! (Score:3, Funny)
I hate to tell you, but not getting laid doesn't qualify as "news" for 90% of us here. But thanks for reminding us, jerk.
My take on pro vs. am (Score:3, Insightful)
What was Leonardo? What was Galileo? (Score:5, Insightful)
For the last 100 years in the US, for example, we've been consumed by consumption. Things have to make money in order to be researched or experimented with and people have to make money to survive. So everyone gets a 9 to 5 job and works their tail off until they go into business for themselves or find some niche that makes them happy that also pays them.
I think the problem is that the over all amount of science and pure research has shrunk in recent years because so many people are concerned about two things:
1) What they think is important rather than what's best for science in general.
2) Money.
I.E. "why should my taxes fund that research? Huh? it might cure disease in 20 years? I don't get it, it must be stupid since I don't understand how that could possibly happen. Now pardon me while I go manage my snack food and oil stock portfolio."
And worse, in the US, so many people have less hobby time than they used to because people are working longer hours in the US.
Scientists of old had more significant hobby time than dop typical US citizens. They also were funded more often by local lords who thought it a status symbol to be funding the local science or art geek. Our national endowments for the arts and sciences inthe US have been gutted as of late because the public feels these funds "unnecessary."
Science and Art lead society. Most americans don't get that, because they are scared of change. So we are stuck with the same music as before, the same stupid non-important drugs, and the same people running the government, and less and less real art and science coming out of this country.
Hopefully, the UK will heed the BBC and turn away from the way the US is running itself into the ground.
Re:What was Leonardo? What was Galileo? (Score:2)
Your entire "insightful" comment is predicated on this assumption.
Prove it.
Re:What was Leonardo? What was Galileo? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not an expert, but I suspect that it hasn't changed all that much. "Scientists of old" are the people who are remembered because they made such a significant impact on science. Just because we remember them, however, doesn't mean that there weren't scores of potentially capable scientists whose
15 mins for Geeks (Score:2)
Looking back through history (Score:5, Insightful)
Top Five Pro-Am activities (Score:5, Funny)
Top five pro-am activities:
Gardening
DIY
Sports
Arts and Crafts
Photography
And the number one most popular pro-am activity:
Sex.
Go ahead, London.
Money.... (Score:3, Insightful)
One of the reasons I think people like working on opensource software is because they work with people that love what they do and want to do it the right way and be proud of it. You start mixing govt money into this equation, then every tom, dick and harry will be claiming they are pro-ams because they have contributed a bunch of half-a$$ed source to a project. This in my opinion would destroy the quality and 'pure' ideology of open source/free software. Keep OSDL, keep paypal or other donations to a project (firefox is a good example), but keep govt funds out.
It's called "Art" (Score:2)
A friend of mine even pushes it farther, saying that there is no such thing as Computer Engineering (he's a structural engineer) as for him, engineering consists of specific points of scientifically derived knowledge that is arranged to come to computable ends, likea bridge, or a house. He looks at the buggy spaghetti code spewed out in a c
Pro-Am? Now wait a damn minute.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Alan Cox has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Applied Mathematics, and a "real job", and yet he's a "Pro-Am"?
I have a Bachelor of Science Degree in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Texas and a "real job", and I'm a Pro-Am when I contribute to open source projects?
I feel insulted by this article, and I strongly disagree with the point that it makes. While it is true that there are Amateur OSS contributors, when you look at the major players (note: I'm not claiming to be a major player.) they all have advanced degrees in Computer Science, Math, or another Engineering method. These are some exceptionally bright people, and to dismiss them as "Professional Amateurs" does them a pretty great disservice. Just because an OSS contributer is not getting paid does NOT make them an amateur anymore then a laywer doing pro-bono work is an amateur.
Do what you love (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Do what you love (Score:3, Insightful)
Very, very few people make enough money at what they love to live off of it. And most of them are very good.
So the phrase should be "Do what you're best at, or what nobody else will do, and the money will follow." If that happens to correlate with what you love, all the better.
Government funding -- highlights from report (Score:2, Interesting)
Calling them "Pro-Ams" - amateurs who pursue a hobby to a professional standard - it suggests such people should receive government funding to "promote community cohesion".
Fishing for the details in the report [demos.co.uk]..
In sum our main policy proposals for promoting Pro-Am participation include the ideas listed below.
Re:Government funding -- highlights from report (Score:2)
What this report implies (Score:3, Insightful)
What I personally think would be optimal is a both some major prizes for achievement of significant milestones(i.e. creation of the viable first fusion reactor [geocities.com] or a cure for AIDS) and a series of smaller prizes that would involve smaller lifetime payments(work out a set of criteria that would be used to award small lifetime stipends to researchers/inventors on the order of maybe twice what social security pays so these folks don't have to mess with the mundane realities of just scraping by--and have thousands of these awarded every year so that a big chunk of Pro-Ams can expect to get one once they've showng themselves to be serious contributors). Frankly, if the government wants to be anything but a deadbeat, they ought to start giving out these prizes because a lot of agencies could barely run without free software!
I'm a hero!! (Score:3, Funny)
Heroes? No. The future? Maybe... (Score:5, Informative)
The first thing that I notice on here is a lot of detracting comments from people who haven't read the full report, but are just going on the headline. I'm not particularly surprised, as, of the several members of the press that interviewed me, only the BBC actually wanted to try to present the story in a positive light. Others just wanted to regurgitate the press release and get some nerdy quotes about not having a social life, for which I was happy to disappoint. No member of the press that I spoke to had actually read the port as far as I could tell.
Strangely, nobody wanted to publish my photo, because I don't look at all like the stereotypical image of a trainspotting nerd. I feel sorry for the other 5 people who were put forward by Demo as being examples of what Demos calls the "Pro/Amateur" economy, as the press ignored them completely.
So guys, remember that when you're pressing that submit button, you might be coming off as no more intelligent than a tabloid journalist.
I'm pretty encouraged by the report and what Demos are doing with it. For those who don't know the background, Demos is a think-tank organisation that provides policy advice to the british government. In this case, their advice has been obscured behind a knee-jerk press reaction, a reaction that I especially wouldn't have expected from the audience that the report praises.
You might need to know who I am, that I have the nerve to represent the community in this way. Well, I'm a 27 year old programmer from England. I've held a series of successively senior roles in several companies over the last 8 year, that has led to my current position as the Technical Director a company called Getfrank (http://www.getfrank.com/ [getfrank.com]. Along the way I helped get Battle.Net started in Europe when I worked for Sierra/Vivendi running their online presence back in the 90s.
6 years ago, almost to the week, I was one of a handful of people that started an online community called evolt (http://evolt.org/ [evolt.org]). Actually, the wedding I was at this weekend was for 2 of the most prominent members of that community. I'm about to dump most of my time over the next couple of weeks to work on a complete rebuild of the technical architecture behind the community.
About 2 years ago I started working with the Plone project http://plone.org/ [plone.org], and became a core developer through working myself silly helping to get the 2.0 release out of the door. I don't get to contribute to the community as much as I would like at the moment, but that's mainly because everyone there is pretty damned good at what they do.
I have a steady girlfriend, but then, so do nearly all of my geeky friends, except the married ones. I have a social life that can best be characterised as amplified. I code about 50 hours a week at work for clients (on OSS projects), and about 30 hours a week for fun (on whatever the hell I like, but mostly little Torque Engine-based games for fun).
The point about the Pro/Amateur thing isn't people making a living out of their hobbies, it's mostly about motivation, and the availability of expertise and knowledge outside of the traditional bounds of "professions". In fact, it's one of the first indicators that many sections of the economy are noticing a move back away from the protestant work ethic, and back towards concepts of social responsibility and pride in self-directed achievement.
It's all small steps, and getting a report like this published and noticed in the press is just the first tiny step towards change, but it's definitely going to be an interesting journey.
Re:Heroes? No. The future? Maybe... (Score:3, Funny)
That would be "inconsistent"
what's known as descriptive grammer flaws
That would be "grammar"
my education was in literary arts, not science
Hmm...
Other people's milage may vary.
That would be "mileage"
Why is "Pro-Am" term insulting? (Score:2)
Thought - to advance science, help Pro-Ams (Score:2)
Tolkien & Lewis (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, the works of Woolfe, Joyce, and hundreds of authors who are mos
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:5, Insightful)
Take your point, but what about, for example, Phil Zimmerman? He gave us Pretty Good Privacy, and fought long and hard to ensure it was globally accessible. It's hard to know (for example) how many human rights workers lives have been saved by having access to secure communications, but for having the courage to fight for what he believed in, Phil Zimmerman is a hero.
Disclaimer : I was at a recent conference at which Zimmerman gave the keynote and he was, frankly, awful. It was as though someone had stolen his notes, which he hadn't previously read anyway; he winged it, kinda, sorta, for twenty of his allotted forty five minutes, then called for questions. The actual topic of the keynote was touched on precisely once, by a questioner. I suspect that he often *is* able to wing it in front of adoring geek audiences; it was embarassing that on this occasion he was so woefully unprepared. I didn't worship him before, and certainly don't now, but I still hold him as a hero.
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:3)
They're heros, nonetheless, because they achieved a purpose that was noble enough, at great enough personal risk, that people were "sav
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:5, Insightful)
I understand your point, but I think the use of hero in this context is appropriate. A hero does noble things you wish you could do. Narrowing the definition to just people who save lives is not accurate.
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2, Interesting)
Hero He"ro, n.; pl. Heroes. F. h'eros, L. heros, Gr. ?.
1. (Myth.) An illustrious man, supposed to be exalted, after death, to a place among the gods; a demigod, as Hercules.
2. A man of distinguished valor or enterprise in danger, or fortitude in suffering; a prominent or central personage in any remarkable action or event; hence, a great or illustrious person.
Each man is a hero and oracle to somebody. --Emerson.
3. The principal pers
Didn't you get the memo? (Score:2, Insightful)
Hero is now used for everyone important & significant, even if that significance is just being at the wrong place at the wrong time.
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it's fair to apply this definition to dangerous civilian jobs as well. A firefighter who pulls someone out of a burning building, or a cop who busts an armed and dangerous criminal, isn't necessarily going above and beyond; he's doing his job. (OTOH, the specific circumstances may well involve going above and beyond, in which case this is heroism, and should be recognized as such.)
In the case of less dangerous jobs, such as medical research -- yeah, I'd certainly include Salk and the other pioneers of immunization (penicillin was Alexander Fleming, IIRC) especially since they did risk their lives by working with people infected with very dangerous diseases. But the average researcher working in a lab, no matter how competent, shouldn't be called hero unless he does something extraordinary to earn that title. Overuse of the word weakens its meaning, and dishonors those who actually deserve it.
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Overuse of the word weakens its meaning, and dishonors those who actually deserve it.
I suppose the standard ignorant slashdot reply should be something like, "language changes, get used to it" or "if enough people do it, then it's OK".
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Heh. I admit to mixed feelings on this issue -- languages do change over time, and we wouldn't have anywhere near the combination of simplicity and richness we do have in modern English if we'd held ourselves to arbitrary standards. OTOH (there you go) we need to have some standards in order to be able to communicate effectively, especially as our world gr
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
putting yourself at great personal risk by going above and beyond the call of duty to accomplish the mission.
I think you need to add that you are putting yourself at that great personal risk "for the sake of another person". Going above and beyond, putting yourself at great personal risk, while building a skyscraper is brave, maybe, but not heroic. Running out on a beam 150 ft. in the air and grabbing your co-worker by his yellow suspenders when he slips on his bologna sandwich...that is heroic.
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:3, Informative)
That may be the colloquial useage to some, but the first dictionary that I checked does not mention life-saving at all. It mentioned courage, nobility, fighting for a cause...but nothing explicitly about saving lives.
And let's not forget the Greek mathematician "Hero" famous for devising a way to determine the area of a triangle....definately a geek.
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
you need to be careful there throwing around the word hero with firefighters and policemen.
There are some that certianly are. They are the pinnacles of society and the example of who to be.
but I also know a large number of firement and Policemen that are absolute jerks and do the rest a major disservice wearing that badge and/or telling people they are firefighters.
unfortunately the number of police that are honer
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
If Jonas Salk had discovered penicillin and refined it for medical use, he'd have been busted for plagiarizing Fleming's work about 20something years after the fact, and would never have made it out of med school.
If Jonas Salk had developed a program to add tags to MP3 files, he would have been a hero. For revolutionizin
About your sig... (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
A person who traverses hardship and diversity - to do the right thing- at their own expense is a hero.
Examples of heroes:
Teachers - they give up much better paying careers to deal with us as little kids - and todays kids can be even worse
Parents - A good parent is a hero to many. Especially when we see that there are many par
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
That said, though, and I know I'm preaching to the choir here, but I would say that anyone who is consumed by their passions and ends up affecting the lives of hundreds or millions of people for good is probably a hero- or at least something we can aspire to. And I do believe that lives are improved- I know my standard of living has improved, f
Minor niggle... (Score:2)
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2)
To me, the common element i
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:3, Insightful)
No they aren't. "Hero" is one of those words that's circularly defined: a person is automatically a hero if enough others call him a hero. It's about popularity, not effectiveness.
Look at Pvt Jessica Lynch for a good example of a recent hero who did absolutely nothing worthwhile, and whose failures put others' lives at risk. (She gets points for effort, though)
Dominant athletes from Tom Brady to Mike Jordan back to Babe Ruth are heros, and they don't save lives, or ev
Re:Use of 'hero' gratuitous? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Shut and do your job (Score:2)
Re:Nonsense. (Score:2)
You want to be a hero? Go into a profession that saves lives.
I'm not a hero for any of the computer stuff I do.... even when I save Betsy in Accounting's spreadsheet that she's been working on for a week. And neither are you.
If you want to see a hero, go do a ride-along with a cop or a firefighter. Go serve in the military and learn what it really means to have others depend on you, on your competence.