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Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 8:03pm
by Colin63
How did Ferret Worrier get his name?
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 8:22pm
by hubgearfreak
Si wrote:My forum name is based on my love of measurement systems.
mark_w wrote:Hahaha.
i wasn't aware that he was kidding

Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 8:43pm
by thirdcrank
Colin63 wrote:How did Ferret Worrier get his name?
IIRC Ferrit worrier got his name through being so thin it would worry a ferret. (It's explained somewhere on here.)
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 9:23pm
by York Commuter
my screen name
York Commuter
it sort of tells a lot about me!
I've used similarly derived IDs on other fora
Stephen
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 9:29pm
by Mick F
Hello Stephen.
I'm a Stephen too, though more accurately a Stephen Michael.
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 10:24pm
by patricktaylor
I'm a Michael too, though more accurately a Patrick something Michael.
I've always thought that one of the oddest aspects of the web is the almost universal use of nicknames. Of course only a few people can use their own name, but why not get as close as you can, eg: JohnSmith345? Some people do that already, so why hide behind a weird nickname? A username is different - used as extra security for logging on etc - but they've become primary identity.
In the early days of the web, people tended to be more paranoid about identifying themselves in person, so perhaps the nickname thing is a throwback to then. Now, users with a nickname sometimes sign off with their real name at the end of a post, so why not use it up front? I can see how someone might want to define themselves in a way that their real name can't - eg: cycletourist (or whatever) - but many nicknames mean nothing except to their user.
Incidentally, I do like the term 'user'. It's spot on, and probably one of the best nics there is. Users are now scrabbling to invest market value in their legally protected online usernames.
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 10:37pm
by mark_w
S'funny - when I first started out on the internet way back when, I used a nickname I've had since I started work.
But in the main now I just use Mark W - after all that's who I am

Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 10:52pm
by patricktaylor
On reflection, I could perhaps have used my school number as my online identity: 4133. I'm proud of that number. It sums me up nicely. Not many people have a school number (I left school in 1965).
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 11:01pm
by thirdcrank
Like so many people, I can remember our Co-op (LICS) divvy number - 149491 - from the early 1950's. I can also remember my wife's telephone number from the student bedsit she was living in before we were married. Come to think of it, I can remember my first real girlfriend's phone number, but that's not difficult because she came from a small place and the number was just 10 as in one zero.
Now, what did I have for breakfast?

Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 11:09pm
by patricktaylor
thirdcrank wrote:... I can remember my first real girlfriend's phone number ...
Me too. 43776. I can hear it now...
Re: user names
Posted: 1 Feb 2010, 11:23pm
by mark_w
thirdcrank wrote:Like so many people, I can remember our Co-op (LICS) divvy number - 149491 - from the early 1950's. I can also remember my wife's telephone number from the student bedsit she was living in before we were married. Come to think of it, I can remember my first real girlfriend's phone number, but that's not difficult because she came from a small place and the number was just 10 as in one zero.
Now, what did I have for breakfast?

I can remember my father's car registrations from the 70's and 80's which, when mentioned in conversation, always prompts my dad to remind me I remember the most inane things.

Re: user names
Posted: 2 Feb 2010, 1:40pm
by Brian G
Mick F wrote:I'm a Stephen too, though more accurately a Stephen Michael.
I'm a Brian Michael. My parents told me they added Michael in case I didn't like my first name. In the event I don't much like either of them. Unfortunately, when I was being named back in the Dark Ages, the range available to fairly unsophisticated families was a bit limited. It didn't include Tiger, for example...
Brian
Re: user names
Posted: 2 Feb 2010, 1:49pm
by reohn2
patricktaylor wrote:On reflection, I could perhaps have used my school number as my online identity: 4133. I'm proud of that number. It sums me up nicely. Not many people have a school number (I left school in 1965).
School number!! eek!
that troubles me.I'm not a number!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Re: user names
Posted: 2 Feb 2010, 1:59pm
by fimm
patricktaylor wrote:I've always thought that one of the oddest aspects of the web is the almost universal use of nicknames. Of course only a few people can use their own name, but why not get as close as you can, eg: JohnSmith345? Some people do that already, so why hide behind a weird nickname? A username is different - used as extra security for logging on etc - but they've become primary identity.
In the early days of the web, people tended to be more paranoid about identifying themselves in person, so perhaps the nickname thing is a throwback to then.
I think the best reason for not using your real name I've read is so that your employer, or a potential future employer, or a person you don't want to identify or locate you, cannot google you and see what you have been writing (possibly in work time...).
My initials are fmm, and the second letter of my first name is i, so I add that and become fimm.
I always wonder why is thirdcrank, thirdcranK?
Re: user names
Posted: 2 Feb 2010, 2:03pm
by groveller
mw3230 wrote:groveller wrote:My name tells everybody what I do when I get on a hill

It might also say loads about your relationship with the boss!!!
ps - my moniker relates to my initials and a work number I used many years ago!!
I get your point about the boss relationship, -.-.-.-.-. but as a one time shop steward, grovel was the last thing I ever did!