I enjoy when using tech tools on my extremely femme-gendered hobby projects makes them feel out-of-genre important

What an interesting way to trigger some stereotype incongruence and realize how much "tech weight" we give things just by all these relatively shallow signifiers

Look at that font. She must have a hacker brain
Are there things that make work "look Technical" to you? Are there secret signifiers you have become aware of? I love hearing people notice these things
@grimalkina off the top of my head: monospaced fonts, dark mode, hosting things in source control, customer service with issue trackers rather than ticketing systems, Markdown (sort of, that gets complicated), command-line instructions or aesthetics
@glyph @grimalkina diagrams in Visio/Figma, as opposed to Miro boards which tend to be used by people coded as non-technical
@glyph @grimalkina additionally, using keyboard shortcuts and macros; anything that involves changing options, installing additional software. Particularly in corporate environments where non-technical staff don't usually have rights to install anything, having non standard software installed is a flex of sorts

@flexasync @glyph @grimalkina
I am that cliché.

Using a different keyboard layout.
Know how to exit vim
And the extension of that: use vim keybindings wherever possible.

But then again, I knew/know some brilliant techy people who where pretty vanilla operating system persons 🤷‍♂️

@Garonenur @flexasync @glyph that is why these are stereotype associations, not maps to reality!