t3h br0th3r said:
I've started to notice that my grandparents and teachers seem to be chronically over-estimating my level of tech skills and i'm wondering if anyone else here is having the same issues.....
I'm wondering if anyone else is in a similar situation... or really is that uber technomancer with teh l33t hackn skillz.
Magic is anything that you currently don't have an understanding of. Many people fear magic.
To them computers are magic. You are able to work with this magic to a capacity that seems (to them) beyond their comprehension. While you know enough about this "magic" to know that you may know very little, they know so little that they don't even know that there are categories and groups of knowledge in this "magic".
This is pretty common. You might receive similar attention for other things as well. Cars are the easiest to pick out. "Oh, you remember you mentioned you changed your spark plugs and air filter? You mind looking at my car? It makes a funny sound when I turn the wheel...."
Enjoy it. Don't talk above your capabilities (as this is the easiest way to get burned), but be willing to try. Anything you need can be found in Google (Windows/software issues, motherboard beep codes, how to change an inverter in a laptop screen, etc) and technical manuals (language books, motherboard manuals, etc). Do this and you'll learn retarded amounts.
My supervisor at my last job found out I knew something about computers. They told me about a computer setup they needed in some classrooms. Eehhuuhhm.. ok, sure. I was a teacher there, not the tech guy, but ok, why not give it a try.
Over the next 4 years I ended up:
Getting 150 computers, 2 servers, a small army of smaller switches, and 2 fully managed switches
Learning how to terminate Cat 5
Learning how to setup an Active Directory environment
Learning how to setup an IIS web server
Learning how to setup a Linux Samba server
Figuring out the power demands, and ordering the required UPS's ((NEMA L5-30R? WTF is that? Going to need to order a socket now too)
Learning how to write VBS scripts, HTML, and alittle java
Figuring out the cooling requirements to order A/C systems
Learning more about DOS and VBS Active Directory management then I'd ever want to
Learning how to balance my time as the Help Desk/New Requirement request guy
Learning how to manipulate the registry
How to budget and balance requirements
Did I know how to do any of this before? Alittle, but most of it I had to learn on the fly with a few books I bought and Google. Little of it was actually all that difficult when you have the tech data on hand or at least know how to ask Google the right questions. I'm not what I consider "uber l33t" (writing drivers or master of all that is PHP, C++ and SQL), but I made it work.
My intent isn't really to talk about what I did. It's to show that you can make this "magic" work for you if you're confident and willing to try.
Course... there are still some things I will turn down. "Hey, do you know anything about Access? I need a database ..blah blah" Is Access beyond my reach? Nah. Am I going to spend weeks screwing with it without extra pay? "Nah man, sorry. I don't know anything about Access". ; )