Geekatoo, the Geek Bat-Signal

April 27, 2012

To understand this story, you need to understand that grandchildren are like crack cocaine to grandparents. I'm convinced that if our parents could somehow snort our children up their noses to get a bigger fix, they would. And when your parents live out of state, like ours do, access to the Internet isn't just important. No. It is life threatening.

Like Gator in Jungle Fever, grandparents just gotta get their fix of the grandkids every month. And if they don't, if their Internet is broken for any reason, you're going to get an earful via telegraph and facsimile and registered letter until you fix it.

one rule: never get high on your own supply.

Either way, they're gonna get high. On your kids.

My mom is no exception. So when her computer suddenly stopped working, and she couldn't get updates on her three grandkids, I got frantic calls. Which is odd, because everything had been working fine for a few years now. Once Henry was born in 2009, I set her up with a netbook that had Skype and Firefox set to auto update and she'd been able to video chat with us regularly, no problem at all, since then. So what happened?

My first thought was to hell with it, I'll just buy her a new iPad online via the Apple Store. I'm a big fan of the retina display, and surely the touchy-feely iPad would be more resistant to whatever problem she was having than a netbook, what with its archaic "operating system" and "updates" and "keyboard" and "mouse".

With some urging from my wife (I married well), cooler heads prevailed. What if her problem had nothing to do with the computer, but her Internet connection in some way? Then I'd just be trading one set of problems for another with the iPad. I have no idea how things are set up over there, thousands of miles away. I needed help. Help from a fellow geek who lives nearby and is willing to drive out and assist my poor mom.

My mom doesn't live near where I grew up any more, so I have no friend network there. All I could think of was Geek Squad. I've seen the trucks in our neighborhood, and they've been around a while, so I checked out their website. Maybe they'd work?

Geek-squad-service

When I can buy my mom a new iPad for $399, the idea of paying $299 just to have someone come out and fix her old stuff starts to feel like a really bad idea. But I suppose it's a preview of our disposable computer future, because it's increasingly cheaper to buy a new one than it is to bother fixing the old one. This is the stuff that my friend and iFixit founder Kyle Wiens' nightmares are made of. I'm sorry, Kyle. But it's coming.

I posted my discontent on Twitter, as I am wont to do, and received an interesting recommendation for a site I'd never heard of – Geekatoo.

Geekatoo-logo

I was intrigued, first because the site didn't appear to suck which is more than I can say for about half the links I click on, and second because it appealed to my geek instincts. I could post a plea for help for my mom, and a fellow geek, one of my kind who happened to be local, would be willing to head out and assist. I could send out the geek bat-signal! But I was still skeptical. My mom lives in Charlotte, North Carolina which, while not exactly the sticks, isn't necessarily a big tech hub city, either. I figured I had nothing to lose at this point, so I posted the request titled "Mom Needs Tech Support" with the info I had.

Much to my surprise, I got two great bids within 24 hours, geeks with good credentials, and I picked the first one. The estimate was two hours for $45, and he was on-site helping my mom within 2 days from the time I posted.

Geekatoo-case

It turns out that my wife's intuition was correct: the cable internet installer had inexplicably decided to connect my mother's computer to a neighbor's wireless, instead of setting up a WiFi access point for her. So when that neighbor moved away, calamity ensued.

And the results? Well, I think they speak for themselves.

Thank you Jeff you are the best son ever!!!!!!!!!

My mom, as usual, exaggerates about her only son. I am far, far from the best son ever. But any website that can make me look like a hero to my mom, and keep my fellow Super User geeks gainfully employed doing superhero work on my behalf gets a huge thumbs up from me.

Needless to say, strongly recommended. If you need reliable local tech support that won't break the bank, and you want to support both your family and your local geek community at the same time, check out Geekatoo.

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Posted by Jeff Atwood
25 Comments

Okay, so, “Happy Eater”. We’re going to need to know what the deal with that is.

pauldwaite on April 27, 2012 12:49 AM

Considering April 08 was Easter, I'm guessing a typo ;)

Zach S on April 27, 2012 1:02 AM

Why don't you just tell your mom to call her local computer shop?

Usually there are one computer shop willing to provide computer checking service. If a guy would went into the house of my family, I would prefer him to be person with known identity instead of random guy on the internet, eventhough they have some kind of reputation on a particular website. What if one of them are burglar?

Raymond Lam on April 27, 2012 1:14 AM

I just wish they operated in Canada. Right now I use kijiji to achieve similar goals, but there arent always results.

MJ on April 27, 2012 1:14 AM

Jeff loved your post.

My mum died last year and it may be weird to share here but your mums email with its terrible typing and accidental keyboard mashes literally made me cry...

The one piece of advice I can give you is that you should be a great geek son on every opportunity possible.

Doug Rathbone on April 27, 2012 1:37 AM

Seems like a great service, although I'm thinking that the reason the service is so much cheaper than the competition is that people are not paying taxes on this income.

Olli Mahlamäki on April 27, 2012 2:25 AM

Ah, I was hoping it was some sort of nickname. Happy Easter makes much more sense.

pauldwaite on April 27, 2012 2:43 AM

"My mom lives in Charlotte, North Carolina which, while not exactly the sticks, isn't necessarily a big tech hub city"

Jeez Jeff, you don't have to live in NYC or SF to have geeks living nearby. Geeks live in the south too, ya know! :)

Dave Steinberg on April 27, 2012 5:41 AM

I'm in Canada, my mom is in Germany, my in-laws are in Florida (during the Winter), my daughters are in Germany as well.
I installed TeamViewer on all their machines and made it start with the OS. Works like a charm - if the connection is up :-).
My mom is meanwhile very proficient in resetting her router and "harassing" the Deutsche Telekom support people to solve connection problems.

Steffen Roller on April 27, 2012 6:21 AM

"What if her problem had nothing to do with the computer, but her Internet connection in some way? Then I'd just be trading one set of problems for another with the iPad."

That's why the 3G iPad is such a great grandparent device - assuming they live in a 3G-capable area, they don't even need to have an internet connection these days.

Leonardo on April 27, 2012 7:15 AM

The first sentence made this post for me. I have kids aged 3 and 1 and you are *not* kidding.

The advice is great - I've never heard of an easier way to be a geek by proxy over long distances.

That said, the paranoid part of my brain worries that a nefarious geek could easily offer their services and actually fix the broken system...and also copy financial information to a thumb-drive, install a key-logger, etc. A Geek Squad employee could do the same, so hopefully the fact that I haven't heard of this happening means such incidents are rare or nonexistent.

DanCalle on April 27, 2012 8:17 AM

Looks like the site is down.

When it's caused by Slashdot, we say a site has been "slashdotted."

For Daring Fireball, we say it's been "fireballed."

So, what do we call it when Coding Horror traffic (apparently) overwhelms a site?

David Holland on April 27, 2012 9:48 AM

David: Clearly, if the site is down because of this blog, the site has been 'Horrified'.

Dan Esparza on April 27, 2012 9:55 AM

Being the paranoid type (recently left a computer security firm), I wonder how you inject an element of trust into this service. As in, isn't this a GREAT opportunity for people who want to install spyware on the computers of the elderly and steal financial information?

In particular, if you were subtle about it, you might never even get noticed as having done anything of the sort so even your Geekatoo reputation wouldn't get hit. After all, by definition, the people you're working with aren't technically savvy.

Don't get me wrong, I think it's a GREAT idea in general - but I'm curious as to what could be done to make it even safer to use.

Kara McNair on April 27, 2012 4:05 PM

You might want to consider installing logmein free on your mom's computer so you can remote into her computer to fix any other problems (so long as it has an internet connection) https://secure.logmein.com/products/free/
I use this from time to time to fix my mom and dad's computers in the UK from California.

Dc3 on April 27, 2012 10:19 PM

Oh, and another tip for a grandparent's computer is to install Google Screensaver (which comes with picasa) and to set it up to show pictures from a shared Dropbox folder. Then so you can update the pictures shown on your mom's screensaver just by adding photos to a dropbox folder

Dc3 on April 27, 2012 10:27 PM

"My mom lives in Charlotte, North Carolina which, while not exactly the sticks, isn't necessarily a big tech hub city"

We even have electricity to run them new, fancy, com-pu-tors here in Charlotte, NC. It's the 18th biggest city in the country and a major financial tech hub. Go an hour east, west, north, or south for the sticks. :)

Daw2 on April 30, 2012 5:44 AM

Apparently you haven
t heard about NC's Research Triangle?

OK, so Charlotte is slightly outside, but still. There's geeks everywhere in the US.

Neil (SM) on May 1, 2012 12:33 PM

That first line of your post tells me why my father always talks about his grandchildren ( My bro's kids ), and why every time my father asks the same thing to me bro, "when will you come?". I never got his point until now. Ah!

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MehmetAli Mrtz on May 3, 2012 4:21 AM

Geekatoo sounds great. Does anyone know of a good similar site for programming jobs? I'd love to get 5-hours a week on the side somewhere, but nearly all recruiters/job postings are for full-time jobs or require a longer commitment.

Patrick Szalapski on May 5, 2012 12:19 PM

Some people are suggesting Teamviewer and Logmein for when the connection is working. How about Fog Creek's Copilot? Isn't that good, also? Won't Joel be disappointed if noone mentions Copilot?

Jan Tore Sandvik on May 6, 2012 2:06 AM

I kinda wish there was someway to link something like Geekatoo with your stackexchange reputation. So if a person on Geekatoo had a high rep on superuser? I might be more tempted to go with them.

I guess what I am saying is that we need some kind of standardized Internet wide reputation system.

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