noahgibbs: Me and my teddy bear at Karaoke after a day of RubyKaigi in HIroshima in 2017 (more of a hypothesis really)
noahgibbs ([personal profile] noahgibbs) wrote2010-06-01 08:54 am

A Request to Women Working in Tech

A friend recently said something about which, as Shanna's father, I feel conflicted.

She said that as a woman working in technology, she wouldn't recommend that other women enter the field. She's a system administrator. So, while she's not a computer programmer like myself, she's in a very similar field with mostly similar interpersonal dynamics. That is to say, what she says almost certainly applies to my field if it applies to hers. And as an actual woman working in technology, her experience is going to be significantly more accurate than my from-the-outside impressions.

I'm not going to repeat her reasons here. Rather, I'd be very curious whether other women working in technical fields, especially system administration and/or programming, felt the same way. Anybody care to comment? When you comment, please let me know what you do/did in technology. For some of you, I'll know offhand. For many of you, I'll have forgotten. For anybody who comments, there may be other readers who don't know/remember.

Anonymous comments are turned on here. Technically I *do* log IPs and I don't see a quick way to turn it off just for this post, but you have my word that I won't attempt to match up anybody anonymous here with any specific person. If you're really worried for some reason, there are many fine technical measures to make that tracking ineffective at finding you.

[identity profile] dangerpudding.livejournal.com 2010-06-01 11:53 pm (UTC)(link)
FWIW, my read of the "in 15 years things will be different" comment - at least the initial one - isn't "in 15 years things won't be sexist" but rather noting that what I (and [livejournal.com profile] spaghettisquash) do for a living wasn't really even a glimmer in anyone's eye when I was 2 years old - so encouraging an interest in it may have little/nothing to do with where things up. More "in 15 years, knowing how to program may be like knowing how to breathe"... I am seeing an awful lot of english majors and the like taking programming classes right now.