Weaknesses of the Hacker Personality
Hackers have relatively little ability to identify emotionally with
other people. This may be because hackers generally aren't much like
‘other people’. Unsurprisingly, hackers also tend towards
self-absorption, intellectual arrogance, and impatience with people and tasks
perceived to be wasting their time.
As cynical as hackers sometimes wax about the amount of idiocy in the
world, they tend by reflex to assume that everyone is as rational,
‘cool’, and imaginative as they consider themselves. This bias
often contributes to weakness in communication skills. Hackers tend to be
especially poor at confrontation and negotiation.
Another weakness of the hacker personality is a perverse tendancy to
attack all problems from the most technically complicated angle, just because
it may mean more interesting problems to solve, or cooler toys to play with.
Hackers sometimes have trouble grokking that the bubble gum and paperclip
hardware fix is actually the way to go, and that they really don't need to
convince the client to buy that shiny new tool they've had your eye on for two
months.
Because of their passionate embrace of (what they consider to be) the
Right Thing, hackers can be unfortunately intolerant
and bigoted on technical issues, in marked contrast to their general spirit of
camaraderie and tolerance of alternative viewpoints otherwise. Old-time
ITS partisans look down on the ever-growing hordes of
Unix and Linux hackers; Unix
aficionados despise VMS and Windows; and hackers who
are used to conventional command-line user interfaces loudly loathe
mouse-and-menu based systems such as the Macintosh. Hackers who don't indulge
in Usenet consider it a huge waste of time and
bandwidth; fans of old adventure games such as
ADVENT and Zork consider
MUDs to be glorified chat systems devoid of atmosphere
or interesting puzzles; hackers who are willing to devote endless hours to
Usenet or MUDs consider IRC to be a
real waste of time; IRCies think MUDs might be okay if
there weren't all those silly puzzles in the way. And, of course, there are
the perennial holy wars —
EMACS vs. vi,
big-endian vs. little-endian,
RISC vs. CISC, etc., etc., etc. As in society at large, the intensity and
duration of these debates is usually inversely proportional to the number of
objective, factual arguments available to buttress any position.
As a result of all the above traits, many hackers have difficulty
maintaining stable relationships. At worst, they can produce the classic
geek: withdrawn, relationally incompetent, sexually
frustrated, and desperately unhappy when not submerged in his or her craft.
Fortunately, this extreme is far less common than mainstream folklore paints
it — but almost all hackers will recognize something of themselves in
the unflattering paragraphs above.
Hackers are often monumentally disorganized and sloppy about dealing
with the physical world. Bills don't get paid on time, clutter piles up to
incredible heights in homes and offices, and minor maintenance tasks get
deferred indefinitely.