Archive for the ‘Tech talk’ Category

Yay, a White Town reference! Our favorite band!

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

From Chicagoist:

Women in technology are hard to find, and we don’t mean the White Town album. According to the 2001 Current Population Survey data, one out of 10 employed engineers was a woman, while two out of 10 employed engineering technologists and technicians were women. Women made up 17 percent of all industrial engineers, 12 percent of metallurgical/metal engineers and 11.5 percent of chemical engineers. Among all other engineering specialties, women represented fewer than 11 percent.

Such statistics make us happy that organizations such as Women in Technology International exist. And on Thursday at Northwestern’s Kellogg Conference Center, the organization will honor those women who have excelled as industry and civic leaders in the Chicago IT community.

Why can’t Jenny play Halo?

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006

So why don’t more women play video games? Apparently it’s because unlike men, they have “relationship or family responsibilities.” Also, online games have too much emphasis on, well, gaming and not enough socializing, according to this somewhat condescending press release:

“40% of the Second Life membership is female, largely because, unlike a conventional ‘game’, Second Life is a virtual world that emphasizes social activity and creativity,” said Reuben Steiger, CEO of Millions of Us, an interactive marketing firm.

The release is promoting a Nov. 11 event in San Francisco called “Couples, Computers and Gaming.” The announcement makes it sound as though the event is really about women and computer games, but they chose to call it “couples” instead. Because of course, women would only want to get involved with games if their boyfriends were playing already.

The event will feature “comedic” MCing from all-female pro gamer team girlz 0f destruction, who have corporate sponsorship from event organizers VIA Technologies. It’ll also feature John and Mary Schuyler, producers of the “Desperate Housewives” computer game, which looks like a trashier Sims.

Bringing engineers back, plus discovering HIV

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

On Monday, Women In Technology honored five women who’ve made strides in scientific or technical fields, including Francoise Barre-Sinoussi, who co-discovered HIV. Also inducted into their “Hall of Fame” were Maria Azua, a vice president at IBM who holds 27 patents and has another 59 pending, and Been-Jon Woo, an engineer at Intel who holds 13 patents.

Another honoree has helped HP realize that helping women engineers return to work after they give birth isn’t rocket science, according to the inspiring lede in the Mercury News story:

The pattern was depressing. For years, Nor Rae Spohn watched as women engineers at Hewlett-Packard would take time off work to have children and then disappear. “The technology moved quickly, and you couldn’t entice them to come back,” she said.

But Spohn, vice president of business imaging and printing at HP in Boise, and her management team worked to get women engineers to come back to work part time — anywhere from two to four days a week. The result: Her organization is 22 percent women in a male-dominated industry. “As their kids get older, they gladly come back to the workplace and we haven’t lost them,” she said.

The fifth honoree, Kim Jones from Sun Microsystems, was quoted as saying: “I want to pass on the message that diversity is critical in all decisions a business makes.”