Being in a work environment where quite a lot of people have stickers on their laptop lids I am pretty confident you'd have to actively point at it and be like "See? That's the joke." for someone to even notice it because people just don't pay that much attention to it. It's too subtile, but I get that's the point.
Second day of my first ever internship, I dented the aluminium lid of my brand new, very expensive, work Macbook.
So I had an idea - I slapped a band-aid on the dent to hide it. Caught the attention of way too many people. Everytime they inquired, I'd tell them it's because I hurt the laptop by denting it. Resulted in amused and confused faces alike.
This would be a fun game. Take some heavier stickered entries from DevLids.com, Photoshop some of those misbrands-stickers, and let people guess the "fake" ones.
I found the vim/vscode one especially obnoxious. OTOH, it took me a while to work out what was 'wrong' with the Debian/Ubuntu one. Maybe there's some unconscious biases at play.
I kinda like that these misbrands are all done in the style of a competing technology, or a misconception that would kinda bother people (like vim / vscode, rust / go, or angular / react).
When I saw that sticker, I immediately wanted to give it to this SEO consultant I worked with several years ago. We had a Python + Angular stack so among our first conversations went like:
Him: Okay your biggest problem right now is that your website is written in Java.
Me: Uhh...no...we use Python. Why is our choice of backend language a problem? (I honestly thought this involves a development in Google v. Oracle that I didn't know about.)
Him: No, no. It's all in Java. Look...(he uses a tool that shows us what Googlebot sees).
Me: Ah...Javascript.
Him: Yes, Java.
I instantly recognized the situation I was in so I didn't opt for pedantry. I adjusted accordingly but I kept using Javascript on my side of the conversation. I dunno if he ever caught on to that or if someone ever corrected him but this has been some kind of inside joke in my engineering team at the time.
I'm hoping if he has this on his laptop lid, it would serve as a "hobo sign" for future software engineers he might have to meet with. (Not to be mean on Christmas! He gave us competent advice, this issue aside.)
It was done on purpose, and early on JVM was shipped with Netscape Navigator. The rebranding of LiveScript (iirc) to JavaScript was done to connect to the Java hype of the time.
> To be honest they should have picked a different name for JavaScript since it has nothing to do with Java.
It was marketing very much in cooperation with Sun.
That's why JS has a C-style syntax: Netscape simultaneously looked at embedding Java and hired Eich to embed Scheme, which then morphed into a bespoke language with Java-inspired syntax but semantics closer to Scheme's.
>In 1995, after 10 days of work, Brendan Eich created a scripting language for browsers. He called it Mocha. The language was renamed several times over the course of just a couple of months, and was eventually given the name we know today, JavaScript. Brendan originally wanted to add support for the Schema programming language to the Netscape browser, but his superiors wanted the language available in their browser to be more like the then popular Java [1].
[1] Freely based on a description from book and wikipedia:
C. Saternos, ClientServer Web Apps with JavaScript and Java. O’Reilly Media, Inc., 2014.
I felt bad that PHP and Django were unfairly left out in the RoR misbrand (well, Wordpress is written in PHP but that looked a bit remote), so I decided to fix that: https://imgur.com/a/quN1aEa. Now THAT should make someone's blood boil.
(sorry for the aliasing, the font was taken from a screenshot)
Never understood why people put stickers on their laptops, to me it seems like a cargo cult. Oh, you’re using this trendy library? Are you a brogrammer or a programmer? Why is libraries and technologies trendy anyway, so much time has been wasted building something using the wrong tool for the job. It also ruins the design of the laptop, just like a phone case does. Maybe I’m just old.
For me it's positive memories. Every time I pull my laptop out I'm greeted with a mash of events I've been proud to have been involved in and technologies I've done good things with - it's good motivation to continue to do good things. Same goes for every place I've glued the case back together (and frankly a lot of the scars on my body). It all reminds me of a story so why not collect the good ones.
I don't like them either but having one is definitely better than displaying the manufacturer logo. Far less obnoxious than advertising a product you had to pay for. I also never buy clothes with printed brand names and remove every single logo I can off my car.
If the designers of the phone want to provide a reasonably priced cover that will hold my credit cards and protect the screen then perhaps they can make one that complements the device; and perhaps I'll buy it. Until then I'll have to make do with what the third party suppliers can deliver, there is no way I'm going to carry my mobile without having it in a case.
The same argument can be made for tattoos. Why ruin the design of perfectly good skin? And not so long ago, it was the common opinion.
Stickers are a way of expression. Sometimes, I don't like the idea being expressed, sometimes I do. Clean is fine too.
Phone covers are usually for protection. And a reason I hate phones with a glass back (thankfully a dying trend). It is fragile, slippery, heavy and not structural, it only looks good in a store because people put on a case afterwards. Pre Galaxy S6, Samsung had the perfect back cover, made of light plastic, openable and replaceable, and in the case of the S5, waterproof. You may find it ugly, but under a protective case, you don't see it. In fact, they even sold cases that replaced the back cover.
I've certainly used it as a conversation starter, just like wearing a band tee. I think there's something interesting to say as well about putting cheap stickers on a a super expensive laptop as a “see if I care” vibe like slapping a bumper sticker on a Lamborghini.
It's a way to express your opinion. Quite a lot of stuff on devlids.com is political. Like a bumper sticker or a t shirt. Althoug it probably is a "everybody posts, nobody reads" situation.
The company I work for handed out stickers when I joined and I put my company logo sticker on the work laptop so that I don't confuse it with my personal one.
What's worse is the stickers will fade after a while and then just look bad. I used to put stickers on my laptops, but I stopped doing it a few years ago. I especially don't want to put a random company logo/brand on my laptop (as opposed to a library or programming language, which I'd be a little happier with, at least)
I never use stickers from commercial projects or just because something is trendy.
I have stickers from community projects that I actively contribute to or projects that are really meaningful to me and I support morally and financially.
I used to want to personalize my laptops. Due to same vague notion it'd reduce confusion in the office. (Which proved to not be a problem.)
Not big on product stickers. Because "No Logo".
I haven't liked any of the cases I've tried. Among other problems, accumulation of grit and scuz.
I once tried that spray rubber stuff (on an old sacrificial laptop). PlastiDip? Didn't work well. I'm dumb about this stuff. Someone with more experience could probably make it "nice". I plugged stuff into the ports I cared about. Then tried to tidy all the edges with an exacto knife. Looked terrible.
You know those fancy vinyl car wraps? I keep expecting someone to do that for laptops.
> You know those fancy vinyl car wraps? I keep expecting someone to do that for laptops.
I had one of those in like 2006. There was a website where I gave my laptop model, uploaded the image I wanted, and they mailed me a perfectly sized sticker that covered my entire laptop back.
I made one real one, and a "Three Wolf Moon" one for fun.
I personally use generic stickers from random sticker packs, since I also don't like the product or political stuff (well, work laptop can have employers product if there's nice stickers for that). E.g. the laptop I'm typing this on has a small bird sticker in one corner.
> You know those fancy vinyl car wraps? I keep expecting someone to do that for laptops.
ferris.svg - The rust mascot crab (called "ferris") with the face and color of Gopher (the golang mascot)
github.svg - GitHub in a Gitlab styled logo
javascript.svg - JavaScript written in a Java-styled font + the Java logo (Sun/Oracle)
pip.svg - Pip (the python package manager) styled in the npm logo style (node.js package manager)
rails.svg - Ruby on Rails with pretty much the rails logo, but in the color of WordPress. Also the "RubyOn Rails" text theming is in the style of the WordPress logo typography
react.svg - ReactJS in a the Angular logo, including the font style
rust.svg - (this one was truly painful, personally :P) "Rust" (the language) displayed in the node.js logo font styling, including colors
ubuntu.svg - "Ubunutu" styled in the debian (linux distribution) font styling, along with the debian logo. This one specifically, is where the hybrid feels the most accurate since Ubuntu is a debian-based linux distro, but I do believe the communities don't get along very well (or at least that's the running joke)
vscode.svg - VS Code (Visual Studio Code, the IDE/Text Editor) displayed in the "Vim" logo font styling and the logo with the stylized "V"
I don't know if it's just me by I would love to have these as t-shirts. I would buy them all in a heartbeat. Great for conversation starter or as a prank to my fellow CS friends lol
I was guessing something PHP-related, but I couldn't guess Wordpress fwiw.
Python/Ruby worlds generally have the "it's pretty much the same shit" attitude towards each others' ecosystem, so it wouldn't be exactly the same message :)
numlock86|4 years ago
bunnythefifth|4 years ago
So I had an idea - I slapped a band-aid on the dent to hide it. Caught the attention of way too many people. Everytime they inquired, I'd tell them it's because I hurt the laptop by denting it. Resulted in amused and confused faces alike.
citeguised|4 years ago
nonsince|4 years ago
Pxtl|4 years ago
yiksanchan|4 years ago
Code: https://github.com/yiksanchan/misbrands
Check it out!
Aeolun|4 years ago
yiksanchan|4 years ago
https://opensea.io/collection/sillycon-valley
meepmorp|4 years ago
bichiliad|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
[deleted]
southerntofu|4 years ago
jamescun|4 years ago
namibj|4 years ago
Edit: there's also the inverse, called "fepher".
tryauuum|4 years ago
it's like a go's gopher but smaller and more dangerous
metaphor|4 years ago
fiedzia|4 years ago
tupac_speedrap|4 years ago
skytreader|4 years ago
Him: Okay your biggest problem right now is that your website is written in Java.
Me: Uhh...no...we use Python. Why is our choice of backend language a problem? (I honestly thought this involves a development in Google v. Oracle that I didn't know about.)
Him: No, no. It's all in Java. Look...(he uses a tool that shows us what Googlebot sees).
Me: Ah...Javascript.
Him: Yes, Java.
I instantly recognized the situation I was in so I didn't opt for pedantry. I adjusted accordingly but I kept using Javascript on my side of the conversation. I dunno if he ever caught on to that or if someone ever corrected him but this has been some kind of inside joke in my engineering team at the time.
I'm hoping if he has this on his laptop lid, it would serve as a "hobo sign" for future software engineers he might have to meet with. (Not to be mean on Christmas! He gave us competent advice, this issue aside.)
p_l|4 years ago
masklinn|4 years ago
It was marketing very much in cooperation with Sun.
That's why JS has a C-style syntax: Netscape simultaneously looked at embedding Java and hired Eich to embed Scheme, which then morphed into a bespoke language with Java-inspired syntax but semantics closer to Scheme's.
Lealen|4 years ago
>In 1995, after 10 days of work, Brendan Eich created a scripting language for browsers. He called it Mocha. The language was renamed several times over the course of just a couple of months, and was eventually given the name we know today, JavaScript. Brendan originally wanted to add support for the Schema programming language to the Netscape browser, but his superiors wanted the language available in their browser to be more like the then popular Java [1].
[1] Freely based on a description from book and wikipedia:
C. Saternos, ClientServer Web Apps with JavaScript and Java. O’Reilly Media, Inc., 2014.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript
danuker|4 years ago
smarx007|4 years ago
(sorry for the aliasing, the font was taken from a screenshot)
afandian|4 years ago
logotype|4 years ago
thrwyoilarticle|4 years ago
BuildTheRobots|4 years ago
lvass|4 years ago
jfim|4 years ago
kwhitefoot|4 years ago
If the designers of the phone want to provide a reasonably priced cover that will hold my credit cards and protect the screen then perhaps they can make one that complements the device; and perhaps I'll buy it. Until then I'll have to make do with what the third party suppliers can deliver, there is no way I'm going to carry my mobile without having it in a case.
GuB-42|4 years ago
Stickers are a way of expression. Sometimes, I don't like the idea being expressed, sometimes I do. Clean is fine too.
Phone covers are usually for protection. And a reason I hate phones with a glass back (thankfully a dying trend). It is fragile, slippery, heavy and not structural, it only looks good in a store because people put on a case afterwards. Pre Galaxy S6, Samsung had the perfect back cover, made of light plastic, openable and replaceable, and in the case of the S5, waterproof. You may find it ugly, but under a protective case, you don't see it. In fact, they even sold cases that replaced the back cover.
toastal|4 years ago
social_quotient|4 years ago
1ris|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
[deleted]
friedman23|4 years ago
misnome|4 years ago
dkersten|4 years ago
goodpoint|4 years ago
I have stickers from community projects that I actively contribute to or projects that are really meaningful to me and I support morally and financially.
In limited amount and size not to be tacky...
Many people apply the same logic to tattoos.
bootlooped|4 years ago
lmarcos|4 years ago
notsureaboutpg|4 years ago
[deleted]
junon|4 years ago
Great job! :D
tapia|4 years ago
specialist|4 years ago
Not big on product stickers. Because "No Logo".
I haven't liked any of the cases I've tried. Among other problems, accumulation of grit and scuz.
I once tried that spray rubber stuff (on an old sacrificial laptop). PlastiDip? Didn't work well. I'm dumb about this stuff. Someone with more experience could probably make it "nice". I plugged stuff into the ports I cared about. Then tried to tidy all the edges with an exacto knife. Looked terrible.
You know those fancy vinyl car wraps? I keep expecting someone to do that for laptops.
rexreed|4 years ago
I got these transparent covers for my Mac: https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0009/5354/8852/products/cm...
Then I made a custom vinyl skin from DecalGirl that was applied to the top transparent cover : https://www.decalgirl.com/skins/laptops/apple
Problem solved. Now I have a laptop "wrap" that isn't permanently or semi-permanently attached to the machine.
DecalGirl has a bunch of other laptop skins as well for Dell, HP, Acer etc: https://www.decalgirl.com/skins/laptops
mabbo|4 years ago
I had one of those in like 2006. There was a website where I gave my laptop model, uploaded the image I wanted, and they mailed me a perfectly sized sticker that covered my entire laptop back.
I made one real one, and a "Three Wolf Moon" one for fun.
detaro|4 years ago
I personally use generic stickers from random sticker packs, since I also don't like the product or political stuff (well, work laptop can have employers product if there's nice stickers for that). E.g. the laptop I'm typing this on has a small bird sticker in one corner.
> You know those fancy vinyl car wraps? I keep expecting someone to do that for laptops.
"Laptop skins" is the keyword for that.
lvncelot|4 years ago
Sounds like something dbrand[1] does.
[1]https://dbrand.com/shop/dell-xps-13-skins-9380
awestroke|4 years ago
marcosdumay|4 years ago
omnicognate|4 years ago
Is there an explanation anywhere, or is someone willing to provide one?
rohanprabhu|4 years ago
github.svg - GitHub in a Gitlab styled logo
javascript.svg - JavaScript written in a Java-styled font + the Java logo (Sun/Oracle)
pip.svg - Pip (the python package manager) styled in the npm logo style (node.js package manager)
rails.svg - Ruby on Rails with pretty much the rails logo, but in the color of WordPress. Also the "RubyOn Rails" text theming is in the style of the WordPress logo typography
react.svg - ReactJS in a the Angular logo, including the font style
rust.svg - (this one was truly painful, personally :P) "Rust" (the language) displayed in the node.js logo font styling, including colors
ubuntu.svg - "Ubunutu" styled in the debian (linux distribution) font styling, along with the debian logo. This one specifically, is where the hybrid feels the most accurate since Ubuntu is a debian-based linux distro, but I do believe the communities don't get along very well (or at least that's the running joke)
vscode.svg - VS Code (Visual Studio Code, the IDE/Text Editor) displayed in the "Vim" logo font styling and the logo with the stylized "V"
embik|4 years ago
stayfrosty420|4 years ago
rgoulter|4 years ago
Hippocrates|4 years ago
opk|4 years ago
nedp|4 years ago
ncovercash|4 years ago
MikusR|4 years ago
JauntyHatAngle|4 years ago
mirekrusin|4 years ago
nix23|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
[deleted]
jacob019|4 years ago
skhr0680|4 years ago
adenozine|4 years ago
The gopher ferris one is genius.
gnz11|4 years ago
necovek|4 years ago
Python/Ruby worlds generally have the "it's pretty much the same shit" attitude towards each others' ecosystem, so it wouldn't be exactly the same message :)
anyfactor|4 years ago
harel|4 years ago
alanlammiman|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
[deleted]
albert_e|4 years ago
once can go to town with all the frameworks in big data ecosystem
markus_zhang|4 years ago
oefnak|4 years ago
alexnes|4 years ago
[deleted]