Diary of a Network Geek

The trials and tribulations of a Certified Novell Engineer who's been stranded in Houston, Texas.

7/11/2005

Naming Conventions

Filed under: Art,Fun Work,Geek Work,The Network Geek at Home — Posted by the Network Geek during the Hour of the Hare which is terribly early in the morning or 6:18 am for you boring, normal people.
The moon is Waxing Gibbous

“Give a thing a name and it will somehow come to be.”
Names matter. Network device names matter a lot and, since it looks like I’ll be redoing my home network, I’ve been thinking about names and naming conventions. I’ve worked with just about any and all naming conventions that you might imagine. Everything from the very practical LocationFunctionSequencenumber scheme (ie. HouAcct01, ChiMIS13, etc. ) to servers named for NASA spacecraft (ie. Challenger, Discovery, etc. ) I’ve seen stuff named for fantasy fiction characters and Greek mythology and Milton’s angels or devils. I even knew a guy who named his routers after dead musicians just so he could send out pings and see the response “Elvis is alive”. No joke. I personally have also used titles of positions in the Yakuza gang structure, as well as various authors and artists. I’ve even heard of guys using their favorite cartoon characters.
Personally, I like to have something with an underlying meaning to it. So, for instance, when I used the Yakuza schema, the main NDS server was “Kumicho”, which is the “boss of bosses”. And, on a whim, I named the printer Hokusai, after the famous artist. The guy who used angels named them based on what each angel had providence over, such as naming his “alerter” Gabriel, who blew his horn to sound the end of the world, if memory serves.
I’ve thought about using both Norse and Voodoo god names, since they’re somewhat unusual, but their “function” is well documented. I’ve also thought about using the various sefiroth of the Kabbalistic “Tree of Life”, for similar reasons. Greek mythology is far too passé to use and, for home, the LocationFunctionSequence method just isn’t fun enough.
So, anyone have any thoughts or suggestions?

(BTW, the quote is from George R. R. Martin in Dying of the Light which is one of the greatest “soft” science-fiction books I’ve ever read. It’s perfect after a breakup.)

4 Comments

  1. I guess I am out of fashion because I actually use mythology for home network. The domain is the Labyrinth and the beastly Windows server is Minotaur and the mighty Linux server named Thesues to slay the Minotaur. My laptop is called Icarus as it can fly way but burns really friggin’ hot, hot enough to melt wax, and the wife’s laptop is called Ariadne as she is a good female character in the story.

    Just need a back story to make it fun.

    I know a guy who names all of his computers after biological killers. I have a real hard time working on a computer called anthrax or botulism.

    Comment by Stone — 7/11/2005 @ 2:10 pm

  2. You know, I’ve been thinking about this and I like the story thing. I also forgot to include the fact that I’d been considering using Lovecraft’s Cthulu Mythos for a naming convention. Hey, it’s for home, so it doesn’t matter if anyone else can pronounce the names of my network devices!

    Comment by the Network Geek — 7/12/2005 @ 5:16 pm

  3. Hmmm…server seems down…I’ll try a ping…Damn! Does Shub-Niggurath have one “g” or two…

    Comment by Paul — 7/29/2005 @ 7:32 am

  4. Now, all you need is an alias for “ping”, like say “awake”. That way, you can type “awake Cthulu” and get the response “Cthulu is alive”!

    Comment by the Network Geek — 7/29/2005 @ 8:06 am

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