[nycbug-talk] Re: Women in Open Source (fwd)
Jesse Callaway
jesse
Tue Aug 3 16:30:45 EDT 2004
On Aug 3, 2004, at 4:16 PM, Louis Bertrand wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Aug 2004, Jesse Callaway wrote:
>
>> women. Really, think of getting into the fashion industry as a non-gay
>> male.
>>
> But wait! Does that mean Apple programmers are gay males? Apple's sales
> go up when they introduce new colours so I figure they must be in the
> fashion industry ;)
>
> Kidding aside, I think one of the main problems is how programming is
> viewed. You can view it from the user space or the problem space.
> The difference being "what am I trying to accomplish?" vs. "What tool
> should I use?". It's sort of like the difference between O-O
> programming,
> where you try to write code that models real world objects or concepts,
> and procedural programming where you only think in terms of data
> structures
> and algorithms; fundamentally they are the same, but you think about
> them
> differently. I think we need radically more "thinking like users who
> just
> want to get their work done" to attract women to programming.
>
> Here's an example: look at the various spam filtering/blacklisting
> utilities out there (nothing spurs creativity like being bombarded
> with gibberish, it seems). They are invariably small standalone
> utilities
> that blacklist or tag spam as it is detected. However, there is no
> smoothly integrated solution -- you have to hand-stitch them together
> with procmail or amavis. It all works, yes, but by the time you've put
> it all together, you would have been better off just changing email
> addresses and getting on with your life.
>
> And finally, if this post wasn't already long enough, I refer you to
> this interesting thread in the Python Edu-SIG mailing list "Girls,
> women and Programming (- and Python)":
> http://mail.python.org/pipermail/edu-sig/2002-August/002137.html
>
> Ciao
> --Louis <louis at bertrandtech dot ca>
>
>
>
Well if German girls are taking Python classes I think that's almost
far enough. It's spawning the interest and creating a "whole new world"
(don't get scared, me spitting out the window is a whole new world...)
basically and environment where girls and computers are cool. (may I
remind us that it's yet again a new world since this email started)
Maybe this change of environment is happening rapidly enough to be
somewhat acceptable.... maybe it's not. I think numbers or other
analysis that come out of this report may be a good bellwether.
But the BSD's. Are BSD users more friendly and is it closer to this
ideal environment? I'll admit, I don't know. I haven't tried commiting
code as a male, let alone as a female.
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