Re: [Edu-sig] women in computer (was: source code from SA:10648)
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 3:00 PM, Calcpage <calcpage@aol.com> wrote:
There's a lot of content on YouTube regarding Ada Lovelace Day as well. There was some discussion on the AP-CompSci listserv about making a Grace Murray Hopper Day as well. The problem IIRC was that Hopper's and Lovelace's (or is it Byron) birthdays were very close if not, in fact, the same day (not year of course).
Regards, A. Jorge Garcia Applied Math & CS Baldwin SHS & Nassau CC http://shadowfaxrant.blogspot.com http://www.youtube.com/calcpage2009 Sent from my iPod
We have other ways to honor people besides having days in their honor. Given Ada and Hopper, I'm happy to circle "computer science" as "belonging to women", which of course just gets me in hot water with some of the guy-centric storytellers. I posted some essays to math-thinking-l about this, some here, some on Python's diversity list (private archive -- you have to join it to read it, unlike edu-sig). Lots about "FOSS witches", which came up around here awhile back as well: http://www.mail-archive.com/edu-sig@python.org/msg05726.html The New Yorker magazine once published a cover story slamming Ada, trying to withdraw her title as "first computer programmer". I rallied to her defense: http://www.grunch.net/synergetics/adaessay.html Of course one might argue "it doesn't mean anything" to say women control computer science. Likewise men don't control anything I suppose one could say (least of all themselves). However, in terms of seeking balance, I'm happy to develop this narrative line. Our next truly creative bursts (if we have any) will all have to do with using computing technology to take better care of "women and children" (the signature civilians) and less to do with world domination through brute force (a male specialty). OLPC etc. Caring about community. Mesh networking etc. Yes, sounds like a "party line" ("pirate party"?).[0] I am heartened to see open source moving into health care, even if that's just MUMPS leading the charge. At the hospital I worked at, I tried to envision a more contemporary SQL based approach [1], but then I think the future of medical records will be more like Facebook (except more private and with medical devices and imaging systems for "friends" -- along with physicians and their case notes).[2] Kirby [0] re Pirate Party http://controlroom.blogspot.com/2007/08/which-hollywood-star-for-president.h... [1] Django / Python instead of MUMPS? http://www.4dsolutions.net/presentations/charting_a_future_sysadmin.pdf [2] Medical records in Cassandra or one of those "schema-less" databases http://controlroom.blogspot.com/2009/06/medical-privacy.html
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kirby urner