Personal Icon and Nickname meaning

Well I gotta tell ya, some of these personal icons are awesome. Jinn Fizz and Stupendous Man are two of my favorites. I'm interested in the meaning behind them. To some it just looks cool, to some there may be some history. Also, I think I know why BoXXi's is a box, but I don't know why he's BoXXi. What makes Corky_O Corky? Why does butch have a 123 and a motorcycle? What's a Jafo? Why did sbgFX kill the Spyder?

So if you got a minute, tell us why you chose your nickname and what, if anything, your icon represents.

I won't go first this time. Someone else.
106,272 views 269 replies
Reply #1 Top
Very Boring...I've been using my initials since...well, forever and hoping the Dodgers do some winning this decade.
Reply #2 Top
I'd love to have a personal icon, but have no graphics skill. As for the nick ... I'm a Denver Bronco's fan and the 7 is for John Elway. Why am I missing an "o" in broncofan7. Well, was creating an email address at hotmail and in order to get that email I had to drop the o
Reply #3 Top
Mine is from a song by Rush on the Hemispheres, album. Cygnus is also a Constellation called The Swan,
which contains a Black Hole CygnusX-1 take this and modify it to CygnusXII, the XII being my birthday.
My Icon is a picture of Bob JR Dobbs, of the Church of the SubGenius, and Devote of Slack.
http://www.subgenius.com/ Church of the SubGenius

RUSH Hemispheres Part IV

[Cygnus: Bringer Of Balance]

I have memory and awareness
But I have no shape or form
As a disembodied spirit
I am dead and yet unborn
I have passed into Olympus
As was told in tales of old
To the city of Immortals
Marble white and purest gold...

I see the gods in battle rage on high...
Thunderbolts across the sky...
I cannot move, I cannot hide...
I feel a silent scream begin inside...

Then all at once the chaos ceased
A stillness fell, a sudden peace
The warriors felt my silent cry
And stayed their struggle, mystified

Apollo was atonished
Dionysus thought me mad
But they heard my story further
And they wondered, and were sad

Looking down from Olympus
On a world of doubt and fear
Its surface splintered
Into sorry Hemispheres

They sat a while in silence
Then they turned at last to me
'We will call you Cygnus
The god of Balance you shall be'

Sat 22 January 2005, 12:06 AM [Eastern Standard Time]
Reply #4 Top
Hi SD!

My nick is the result of being frustrated when I couldn't register here (2 1/2 years ago) with my regular nick (Fallstar) which seemed to be taken at the time. I haven't seen anyone around here with the nick, so perhaps I can talk one of the admins into letting me change it? Anyhoo, my current nick is just my initials, the '02' was because '01' wouldn't take either.

My icon was thrown together in PSP in about 3 minutes or so...sort of looks like a Plumeria flower from my home state (Hawaii), so I kept it.

Reply #5 Top

JAFO...

Just Another Fine Observer

[well....maybe not 'fine'.....think of another 'F' word]...

My 'icon' is a cartoon caricature I drew of an FormulaOne 'Observer'....[which is what I do at the GrandsPrix] and is tattooed on my shoulder...

Reply #6 Top
Weaksid

Weapon Expert Ass Kicking Shadow In Darkness

I came up with this name maybe like 10 or so years ago. My Friend and I created this group which wasn't much of anything at the beginning but now since we are older and I kept the group names and titles still together and use them. We are taking things to a new level. We are using things for buisness and the net. If you would type my Nick in a search engine, you would get alot of my stuff and some that the engine fines with the title weakside. The name just came to me while we were building a fort out of whole trees

My Avator? I was just messing around with things and I came up with that. I just never got around to change it to something new.
Reply #7 Top
Well, my mother (before she passed) called my father "Orc" - no reference to Tolkien's creatures mind you, but rather short for "Orcutt" which is our last name.

Somehow, when I was born the nickname "Corky" was decided upon (probably the practical progression from "Orc"). Early years in school proved to be a great playground for making fun of names and "Corky Orcutt" must have been - Ohhhh - in the top 5. Ah, the dramatic learning moments of younger years.

So, when asked to provide a nickname during registration, I (obviously not in a "creative moment") decided to go with my true nickname - "Corky_O", which includes the web and dos safe underscore.

The icon is a dreamcather to represent the "O" (Orcutt) and of course "Corky" in text.

Great thread as always, SD. I truly enjoy learning more about the members of this fun community.
Reply #8 Top
Mine's a play on a comment my Ma made to me when I was a kid. I'd get Xmas and birthday presents ~and due to my inquisitive nature at the time, I'd take the gift's straight to my room and pull them apart, to see how they worked.

...Trouble was, at that age, I had no idea how to put things back together again. One year I was given a rather expensive (at the time) robot, which was mechanised and had flashing lights, and made sounds etc.

..yep ...straight to the room again to pull it apart. At the time, I had a bunch of mates over. When Ma walked in and saw the new robot in a thousand tiny pieces on the floor, she sighed and said: "I wish you'd wreck less Eric, and concentrate more on figuring out how to put things back together"

My mates immediately picked up on the word's "wreck less Eric" ...and the name has been a nick ever since. Had it over thirty years or more

Turns out it was great experience ...because now I CAN put things together, and am a "jack of all trades" with skills in many different area's. Needed in my current position of backpacker hostel operator/manager
Reply #9 Top
Let's see...back in um...1996 or 1997, I got a new Pentium II 133 and one of those AOL 2.5 disks...and needed a cool screenname. So "Hustler" was the best I could come up with at the time, because I was real big on pool [might of made it to the pros, if I didn't quit]. When I learned how to use PC's a bit more, I gave up AOL and shortened it to "Hus", and have been that way for almost 8-9 years now. The user-pic, is kinda self-explanatory...
Reply #10 Top
The nick I originally wanted to use was "Jester" which is an anagram of the first three leters of my two sons' names. (No, it had nothing to do with TopGun, either )
Of course that name was already taken, along with just about any variant made by sticking numbers on the end. Anyway, I stuck my initials on the front and back, and got Tjesterb. The wolf avatar was pretty much made in ten minutes from a picture of a wolf I had on my PC. Tweaked a little in Photoshop, not that you can tell in the postage stamp size you see here on the boards. I also have a tattoo of a wolf in a similar pose, on my arm.
Reply #11 Top
Wow, glad you like the icon, Dragon. There's no mystery or history to it. My all-time favorite comic strip was/is Calvin & Hobbes of which Stupendous Man was my favorite of Calvin's alter egos. So I googled, found an image I liked, down-sized it, and voila!, I am Stupendous Man! (I sure do miss Calvin & Hobbes)

Posted via WinCustomize Browser/Stardock Central
Reply #12 Top

tjesterb ....... t...jester...b  all this time and I never once noticed that....

....and I call myself a 'JAFO', too....

Reply #13 Top
"(I sure do miss Calvin & Hobbes)"

Me too
Reply #14 Top
I used to have long hair and ride a motorcycle to college. I never did put my hair up though and it was always quite messed up by the time I took my helmet off. Some of my class mates said I looked like Scarebear (a cartoon character from a short lived Hanna-Barbera cartoon) and I've had the nickname since ('91).

My personal icon is simply the design I use on my own website
Reply #15 Top
wreck less. That's funny.

In Japanese, a reclining dragon (garyou) is kind of like a person waiting to burst out. A man of potential or a good man hidden among the masses. I don't think I'm a good man, really, but one that can always improve. A person who has not reached their full potential but striving for the mark. It kind of fits my personality, I think.

Just thought the icon I was working on looked cool, so I made it my personal one. Then I realized in February 05 that it was a terrible subconscious mimicry of DanilloOc's, so I changed it to it's current state.
Reply #16 Top
Well I'm Half Native American and my middle name is Lynx, What i do for a living (professional Airbrushing, Art & Graphics Design), we ended up calling 'the Den, Hense-forth "Lynx's Den" I know, boring, but thats all i got for you.....LOL
Reply #17 Top
way back when; I was into doing graffiti and need a original name. I simply mixed together letters that i liked and had a moderate amount of skill using together. I stuck with it,only because it is original. although I havent even thought about graffiti for many years. I'ue used the name since 1997-98 I believe.


my avatar should be my car... another hobby aside from lurking on WC is drag racing.
Reply #18 Top
My best friend in high school called me goober coz I liked to joke and act crazy in class,just added the bean dont know y? 28 is my birthday. my avatar Zim because hes defiant dont take no crap,like when I was a kid growing up in the projects didnt take no crap. Sound stupid oh well!
Reply #19 Top

Reply #20 Top
Those are all my BoXXi icons, and even a BoXXi WB skin. the name comes from a company I used to own, called BoXXi Flight Cases.
Reply #21 Top
my nick came from when i played that Counter-Strike game and all i had was a 166mhz computer and so until i got a new computer (and i guess even after some) i caught bullets in the game really well and i really liked the sound of it, but as i surf the net its not as originial as i once believed oh well... the avatar is a really simple graphic of my middle initials: A.M.A put together back while i was daydreaming in middle school and ive hung onto it as kinda a logo for myself
Reply #22 Top
As far as my nick:



And as for "0197" those were the last 4 numbers of my first cell phone.

What can I say? I'm a bicycle nut.
Reply #23 Top
If you can't quess why I'm called what I am then you can just go.....fish. Besides how many times must we go through all this....why there must be a 10001 threads dealing with peoples nicks and such ... why I never....never mind.
Reply #24 Top

Do I have to do this again? Oh well, you asked for it

Fuzzy logic is a superset of conventional (Boolean) logic that has been
extended to handle the concept of partial truth -- truth values between
"completely true" and "completely false".  It was introduced by Dr. Lotfi
Zadeh of UC/Berkeley in the 1960's as a means to model the uncertainty
of natural language. (Note: Lotfi, not Lofti, is the correct spelling
of his name.)

Zadeh says that rather than regarding fuzzy theory as a single theory, we
should regard the process of ``fuzzification'' as a methodology to
generalize ANY specific theory from a crisp (discrete) to a continuous
(fuzzy) form (see "extension principle" in [2]). Thus recently researchers
have also introduced "fuzzy calculus", "fuzzy differential equations",
and so on (see [7]).

Fuzzy Subsets:

Just as there is a strong relationship between Boolean logic and the
concept of a subset, there is a similar strong relationship between fuzzy
logic and fuzzy subset theory.

In classical set theory, a subset U of a set S can be defined as a
mapping from the elements of S to the elements of the set {0, 1},

   U: S --> {0, 1}

This mapping may be represented as a set of ordered pairs, with exactly
one ordered pair present for each element of S. The first element of the
ordered pair is an element of the set S, and the second element is an
element of the set {0, 1}.  The value zero is used to represent
non-membership, and the value one is used to represent membership.  The
truth or falsity of the statement

    x is in U

is determined by finding the ordered pair whose first element is x.  The
statement is true if the second element of the ordered pair is 1, and the
statement is false if it is 0.

Similarly, a fuzzy subset F of a set S can be defined as a set of ordered
pairs, each with the first element from S, and the second element from
the interval [0,1], with exactly one ordered pair present for each
element of S. This defines a mapping between elements of the set S and
values in the interval [0,1].  The value zero is used to represent
complete non-membership, the value one is used to represent complete
membership, and values in between are used to represent intermediate
DEGREES OF MEMBERSHIP.  The set S is referred to as the UNIVERSE OF
DISCOURSE for the fuzzy subset F.  Frequently, the mapping is described
as a function, the MEMBERSHIP FUNCTION of F. The degree to which the
statement

    x is in F

is true is determined by finding the ordered pair whose first element is
x.  The DEGREE OF TRUTH of the statement is the second element of the
ordered pair.

In practice, the terms "membership function" and fuzzy subset get used
interchangeably.

That's a lot of mathematical baggage, so here's an example.  Let's
talk about people and "tallness".  In this case the set S (the
universe of discourse) is the set of people.  Let's define a fuzzy
subset TALL, which will answer the question "to what degree is person
x tall?" Zadeh describes TALL as a LINGUISTIC VARIABLE, which
represents our cognitive category of "tallness". To each person in the
universe of discourse, we have to assign a degree of membership in the
fuzzy subset TALL.  The easiest way to do this is with a membership
function based on the person's height.

    tall(x) = { 0,                     if height(x) < 5 ft.,
                (height(x)-5ft.)/2ft., if 5 ft. <= height (x) <= 7 ft.,
                1,                     if height(x) > 7 ft. }

A graph of this looks like:

1.0 +                   +-------------------
    |                  /
    |                 /
0.5 +                /
    |               /
    |              /
0.0 +-------------+-----+-------------------
                  |     |
                 5.0   7.0

                height, ft. ->

Given this definition, here are some example values:

Person    Height    degree of tallness
--------------------------------------
Billy     3' 2"     0.00 [I think]
Yoke      5' 5"     0.21
Drew      5' 9"     0.38
Erik      5' 10"    0.42
Mark      6' 1"     0.54
Kareem    7' 2"     1.00 [depends on who you ask]

Expressions like "A is X" can be interpreted as degrees of truth,
e.g., "Drew is TALL" = 0.38.

Note: Membership functions used in most applications almost never have as
simple a shape as tall(x). At minimum, they tend to be triangles pointing
up, and they can be much more complex than that.  Also, the discussion
characterizes membership functions as if they always are based on a
single criterion, but this isn't always the case, although it is quite
common.  One could, for example, want to have the membership function for
TALL depend on both a person's height and their age (he's tall for his
age).  This is perfectly legitimate, and occasionally used in practice.
It's referred to as a two-dimensional membership function, or a "fuzzy
relation".  It's also possible to have even more criteria, or to have the
membership function depend on elements from two completely different
universes of discourse.

Logic Operations:

Now that we know what a statement like "X is LOW" means in fuzzy logic,
how do we interpret a statement like

    X is LOW and Y is HIGH or (not Z is MEDIUM)

The standard definitions in fuzzy logic are:

    truth (not x)   = 1.0 - truth (x)
    truth (x and y) = minimum (truth(x), truth(y))
    truth (x or y)  = maximum (truth(x), truth(y))

Some researchers in fuzzy logic have explored the use of other
interpretations of the AND and OR operations, but the definition for the
NOT operation seems to be safe.

Note that if you plug just the values zero and one into these
definitions, you get the same truth tables as you would expect from
conventional Boolean logic. This is known as the EXTENSION PRINCIPLE,
which states that the classical results of Boolean logic are recovered
from fuzzy logic operations when all fuzzy membership grades are
restricted to the traditional set {0, 1}. This effectively establishes
fuzzy subsets and logic as a true generalization of classical set theory
and logic. In fact, by this reasoning all crisp (traditional) subsets ARE
fuzzy subsets of this very special type; and there is no conflict between
fuzzy and crisp methods.

Some examples -- assume the same definition of TALL as above, and in addition,
assume that we have a fuzzy subset OLD defined by the membership function:

    old (x) = { 0,                      if age(x) < 18 yr.
                (age(x)-18 yr.)/42 yr., if 18 yr. <= age(x) <= 60 yr.
                1,                      if age(x) > 60 yr. }

And for compactness, let

    a = X is TALL and X is OLD
    b = X is TALL or X is OLD
    c = not (X is TALL)

Then we can compute the following values.

height  age     X is TALL       X is OLD        a       b       c
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3' 2"   65      0.00            1.00            0.00    1.00    1.00
5' 5"   30      0.21            0.29            0.21    0.29    0.79
5' 9"   27      0.38            0.21            0.21    0.38    0.62
5' 10"  32      0.42            0.33            0.33    0.42    0.58
6' 1"   31      0.54            0.31            0.31    0.54    0.46
7' 2"   45      1.00            0.64            0.64    1.00    0.00
3' 4"   4       0.00            0.00            0.00    0.00    1.00

For those of you who only grok the metric system, here's a dandy
little conversion table:

  Feet+Inches = Meters
  --------------------
    3'   2"     0.9652
    3'   4"     1.0160
    5'   5"     1.6510
    5'   9"     1.7526
    5'  10"     1.7780
    6'   1"     1.8542
    7'   2"     2.1844

So there you have it. And as for the icon, a logical choice

Reply #25 Top
Essencay = my initials SNK. Avatar is a pic of my best hound Margaret "Queen Maggie May". She's a 80lb dobie & hound mix rescued from the streets of Manchester that had 101 bad habits, including sending one of my other hounds to the vets regularly for stitches. She just needed some hard lovin' and understanding to become the great dog she is today.