| alpha geek |
The most knowledgeable, technically proficient
person in an office or work group. "Ask Larry, he's the alpha geek
around here." |
| bandwidth |
The ability to juggle or handle an excessive amount
of stuff. "I'm really busy and don't have the bandwidth to dedicate
to your issue right now." |
| cobweb site |
A World Wide Web site that hasn't been updated for
a long time. A dead Web page. |
| cube farm |
An office filled with cubicles. |
| dead tree
edition |
The paper version of a publication available in
both paper and electronic forms, as in: "The dead tree edition of
the San Francisco Chronicle..." |
| doorstop |
A computer that is no longer considered fast enough
or to contain insufficient storage, etc. for use in normal work. All
286's and 386's are doorstops. Most 486's are now doorstops. Soon
we'll see Pentium doorstops. |
| egosurfing |
Scanning the net, databases, print media, or
research papers looking for the mention of your name. |
| gray matter |
Older, experienced business people hired by young
entrepreneurial firms looking to appear more reputable and
established. |
| idea hamsters |
People who always seem to have their idea
generators running. |
| keyboard
plaque |
The disgusting buildup of dirt and crud found on
computer keyboards. "Are there any other terminals I can use? This
one has a bad case of keyboard plaque." |
| Let's take
this off-line |
Let's talk about this later, after the meeting. |
| liveware |
Slang for people. Also called wetware or jellyware,
as opposed to hardware, software, and firmware. |
| mouse potato |
The online, wired generation's answer to the couch
potato. |
| nonlinear |
Inappropriately intense negative response. "I told
him we didn't have any Starbucks' Gazebo Blend and he went totally
nonlinear." |
| open-collar
workers |
People who work at home or telecommute. |
| plug-and-play |
A new hire who doesn't need any training. "The new
guy, John, is great. He's totally plug-and-play." |
| randomize |
To divert someone from his or her goal with
tertiary tasks or niggling details. "Marketing has totally
randomized me by constantly changing their minds about the artwork." |
| stress puppy |
A person who seems to thrive on being stressed out
and whiny. |
| total
disconnect |
An extremely low-bandwidth human interaction. "It
was a total disconnect. I spent half an hour explaining how this
stuff worked, and he just didn't get it." |
| uninstalled |
Euphemism for being fired. |