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What's Your (non-tech) Hobby?

Slipped_Disk asks: "Being the curious sort, I was wondering what the Slashdot crowd did while you're not reading Slashdot or doing any of the other geeky things we usually do. So tell me, what is your non-techie hobby? I'm defining non-techie as stuff you do when you're not using a computer, so 'I play videogames' doesn't qualify, but 'I build game consoles' does. I'm especially interested in distinctly non-electronic stuff (ie: film photography, building models, training sociopathic attack cats, etc.). I'm looking forward to some interesting topics, here!"

13 of 407 comments (clear)

  1. Lego by GeckoUK · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Redescovered it as an adult once I started earning enough to afford it. Like all really good toys it is wasted on kids :)

  2. Being handy... by Zandweter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If i have time available to do something really not it-related... I'm probably creating something with my own hands (whitout my keyboard in between)... just a month ago i build my own computer-closset. 2m*60cm*40cm 2 lower "lockable" compartments with my computers, 3 upper compartments with cd's and computerbooks.
    Only because I moved in with my girl, she can't stand the noise (of course) and we have to split 35m2 so going up was the only sollution.

    A year ago I made my own computer-travel-case to go lan'ing

    Wood rules my friends

  3. Wing Chun Kung Fu by Da+VinMan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Looks like I may post the first real response.

    Anyway, done properly, Wing Chun is very meditative and physically taxing (if you're doing the stance properly). At the same time, itâ(TM)s something anyone on two feet can do. It's an internal martial art like Tai Chi which, but it has some immediate and effective applications. It's nothing like you see in the movies though. It's very subtle and hard to appreciate until you actually feel some of the effects.

    But besides all that, it's what I do to associate with non-geeks. I couldn't stomach the thought of golf, so Wing Chun it was. Ironically about half the folks that attend the classes are in some way into IT, but we don't talk shop much.

    For anyone who is curious and resides around the Minneapolis/St. Paul MN area, send me an email at: VincePlatt AT Yahoo D.O.T com.

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    Please mod this post only if you think others should/n't read this. I have enough ego^H^H^Hkarma. Thanks!
  4. I'm a medieval recreationist by mikemacd · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm involved in a historical recreation group call the Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA).

    I take part in armoured combat, recreate clothing and artefacts of people who could have existed in pre1600 history and attempt to recreate their lifestyle. It's a lot of fun.

  5. Fencing by PurpleFloyd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Foil and sabre fencing, via a Boeing Employees club. I've found that it provides me with not only a good workout, but also trains my reflexes and mind. You have to be able to think very well on your feet, and change your strategy on the fly when what seemed so brilliant 2 seconds ago doesn't work. Just trying to use brute force will fail every time against someone who is quick to think and act. Besides, it's fun to poke and whack people with swords!

    --

    That's it. I'm no longer part of Team Sanity.
  6. Re:we've been over this before by evalhalla · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I don't know... shopping would probably be pretty low on the list.I'm trying to think of what my non geek friends do as hobbies. I think its shopping, drinking, and well, a lot of them don't have hobbies,[...]

    I believe you're wrong: I don't think that most geeks don't do what "common people" do, it's more a matter of either having more hobbies or being more devoted to them.

    After all, when I'm not doing something with some computer, listening to music, reading, taking photographies (sorry, gone totally digital after my old film camera broke), building worlds (uhm... that something I do both with a computer and with pen and paper, does it apply?), sewing (guess this applies :) ), roleplay, painting, or whatever else I sometimes do, I also enjoy shopping, as long as it's for something related to one of my hobbies, or drinking and eating with (somehow geeky) friends.

  7. It's... Acting! by Dannon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am a Master Thespian! (No jokes.)

    Well, more like a permanent apprentice. There's a professional theater group in my area that offers apprenticeship opportunities to non-professionals. Sometimes these apprentices are folks that want to get into the biz. Or, sometimes they're like me, they just want theater as a hobby. I've had chances to develop all sorts of useful skills: Construction, lighting control, sound, wiring, organization, memorization, and of course, public speaking. And it's a great way to meet people, too.

    --
    Good judgment comes from experience.
    Experience comes from bad judgment.
  8. Hang gliding by JustAnOtherCodeSerf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'd say I'm one of those nature freak, get the heck away from tech when I'm not at work, types. Flying sites are always out in the middle of nowhere in the most beautiful parts of the country. Imagine the view from the top of a thousand foot mountian, overlooking a lush green valley. Now, imagine the view from three thousand feet above that mountain with a retail hawk off your wingtip (yup, some birds will let us fly with them). Soaring above the earth for hours at a time is true bliss. It's a total zen thing :)

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    -=sig=-
  9. Flying by netringer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Look at my .sig and guess what I do on sunny weekends.

    You can get up from the Flight Sim and try the real thing. Start at BeAPilot.com

    In my case I dreamed about flying all of my life. I decided to give it a go while I was still young enough to enjoy it.

    I had three concerns:
    1) It's very expensive. I can't afford it. (It took a while for me to notice that I could afford it.)
    2) I need to do other things like get a new degree, etc. This will take up a lot of time. (So what? I wasn't making good progress toward that goal anyway.)
    3) If I start, I'll be obsessed by it and I won't do much else. (Again So What? It ain't a drug addiction. It turned out that the obsession wore down, but not much. Like most pilots I think it's so magical I never get tired of talking about it, even if you get tired of hearing about it.)

    Worse than I imagined, I bought a plane. There's where all my money goes.

    There actually is a wave of techies that became pilots about the same time I did. We thought we had money to burn when the stock market was flying high.

    Even now, you can earn a Private Pilot certificate in the US 6 months or so for $5000 or less.

    Join me in the air.

    --
    Ever dream you could fly? Get up from the Flight Sim. I Fly
  10. German Board Games by Apreche · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not many people realize the crappiness of american board games. Games like Monopoly and Sorry and other Milton Bradley/Parker Brothers are almost entirely contests of luck. If you are the winner you can't say that you are better than the other players. The majority of your victory was up to dice.

    There are some games that involve skill in america, but they are mostly based on knowledge and not strategy. Trivial Pursuit and Scrabble are two. Even our war games are primarily luck based. Risk has dice, Axis + Allies has dice, even the great Shogun (Samurai Swords) has dice.

    If you head over to http://www.boardgamegeek.com you'll see there are a ton of board games that just arne't well known in america, but there are two or three companies who bring them over in English. Games like Settlers of Catan, El Grande, and my favorite Puerto Rico! These games are games of pure strategy, and you need a lot of friends to make them happen, so sorry rest of /..

    The majority of them fall into a few categories. Tile laying, where you lay out cardboard tiles to form different things. Wooden Cube: where you place wooden cubes in different "bins". And bargaining, where you make deals with other players and make deals to achieve victory. Every game is different and contains multiple different aspects of the three categories. I love Puerto Rico so much because it doesn't fall into any of the 3 categories. It is a pure game of best strategy wins.

    So, next time you have 3 to 5 people and nothing to do get yourself a german board game. boardgamegeek will be sure to reccomend a good one. If you have 10 hours you can play Die Macher! the simulation of the german senate. I again highly reccomend Puerto Rico. Also, check out some of the "spiell de jahres"(sp) in german it means game of the year. I think Puerto Rico and Settlers are both past winners. Settlers of Catan is probably the most popular and a good starter game because it does involve a slight random factor.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
  11. Graveyards. by hucke · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I explore and photograph graveyards. I've been to about 120 in Cook County, Illinois, and perhaps 40 or so elsewhere.

    With the exception of the modern "memorial park" cemeteries, something interesting can be found in nearly any cemetery. Even the smallest is likely to have something - I particularly like discovering hollow monuments made of zinc hidden away in small urban graveyards.

    Of course, there is a geek side to this as well - cameras and lenses are as much a high-tech device as any computer, more in the field of optics than electronics. Primarily, I use Nikon D100 and N90 bodies with a Nikon 28-105mm lens; I have 18-35mm and 70-210mm lenses, and a 35mm shift lens as well.

    Still, the technology is not my primary focus; it is merely a tool to be used in collecting and preserving the images of graveyards before they are gone.

    My book, "Graveyards of Chicago", can be found on Amazon; and my website is graveyards.com

  12. Studying for Wiccan Ministry by SolemnDragon · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Going to be a licensed, for real (not send-in-your-box-tops) minister, able to marry people by making them jump over brooms... I used to work silver a lot more than i do now, but i still make jewellery. I make strung-bead lace, wirework, and other forms of non-welded work as well. I don't have a lot of energy, for health reasons, but before this latest phase, i did six years of martial arts (hapkido, kenpo and tai chi)...

    i write stories, poetry, and songs (had a band, sang, for said band...) play a reasonably nice guitar at an abysmal skill level, and read when the neuro problems ease up enough to let me. Oh, and i paint, with enthusiasm (and acrylics) if not with talent... I have a lot of houseplants (some of which are in good health) and a cat.

  13. Rock Climbing by Godeke · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The best thing I ever did was discover the rock climbing gym. Now I got twice a week, have lost 25 pounds in the process and feel great! Normal exercise bored me to death, but there is something about hanging on the wall 20 feet up and puzzling out how to make the next move that is such a cool blend of mental and physical that I'm a total addict now. I have even started outdoor rock climbing on sports routes... very different, very cool.

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    Sig under construction since 1998.