You Know You're Taking Computers Too Seriously When...
- You recognize two or more parcel delivery truck drivers and can call them by name.
- One of the package delivery drivers attends your wedding.
- You pay for software to be delivered "next day air" when you really don't need it that quickly.
- You know your package "tracking number" by heart.
- All your friends and relatives give you blank diskettes for your birthday and Christmas presents.
- Have your wife name your computer as the co-respondent in your divorce papers.
- Have never bought one of the "dummies" books.
- Bought all the "dummies" books for your wife/husband to get them involved in computers.
- Stay on the Internet so much that your commercial provider makes you buy a corporate account.
- Ask a potential mate for their e-mail address rather than their sign.
- When you wash clothes, you find stray diskettes in your pockets.
- You hear the word "Windows" on a TV commercial and wrestle the remote away from your wife to turn up the volume only to find out it's a commercial selling new windows for houses.
- You refuse to delete programs off your hard drive that you haven't used in two years.
- You overhear a co-worker mention the word bulletin board and interrupt the conversation only to learn he's talking about a notice on the company bulletin board.
- Can operate three or more communication packages. Know what IDE, RAM, CMOS, MEGS, VESA and SCSI stand for.
- Start looking at new hard drives when you get less than 200 megs of space free on your present drives.
- Subscribe to more than three monthly computer magazines.
- Go out and buy 50 new floppies rather than go through the 300 used ones you have and delete the files on them.
- Get copies of programs from your friends and never use them.
- Have more than five books on the Internet.
- Can't carry on a conversation without changing it to computers.
- Drop everything you're doing to go out and purchase the new program you just read about in a computer magazine.
- Start figuring "must have" computer upgrades into the family budget.
- Try to "sell" computers by talking about how great they are to all your friends and relatives, telling them they've "got to have one."
- Have at least one more computer than people who live in the house.
- Memorize the telephone numbers of your favorite computer stores.
- Upgrade computer software packages as soon as you get notice that one's available, even if the new features aren't something you'll use.
- Call your computer by a name.
- Become the guy that everyone at work comes to with their computer problems.
- Consider calling Microsoft in the United Kingdom to get an early copy of a program you can't buy here.
- Take your computer on vacation with you, even if you go camping.