I am somewhat sympathetic to that point of view, in the very most abstract sense. However...
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Replying to @Grady_Booch @Plinz
Both you and I come from the very privileged position of being white men in Western society. I suspect that many many non-white/non-men would (rightfully) point out they (tragically) have been impeded by the (clear and present) group identities.
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Replying to @Grady_Booch @Plinz
Wishing that were not so will not bring about change; it seems to me that first understanding and accepting the gender divide and the forces that led to it are essential to change, a change that will likely take generations.
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Replying to @Grady_Booch @Plinz
Also, please consider the context of this thread. Ms Mensch
@LouiseMensch asserted that coding is "a masculine pursuit"; I was offering important counterexamples that were significant in the history of computing.2 replies 2 retweets 23 likes -
Replying to @Grady_Booch @Plinz
But anecdote is not evidence. I gave the example of pilots as an analogy. There is no field, including aviation, where women have not “made a significant contribution” and yet the numbers are not the same, not close, and are never likely to become close.
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The things that keep women in low numbers in computing isn’t the thought process required or anything like that. Part of it has been that you used to feel like you had to work 60 hour weeks, part of it is you can’t sit out for a few years and easily come back cause tech moves on
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Replying to @mrcase77 @LouiseMensch and
That makes it hard on women who want to have a family. And part of it is, at some companies, the culture can be aboys club. But the work itself...you’re just issuing instructions to a computer in languages that look increasingly English like.
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Replying to @mrcase77 @LouiseMensch and
There needs to be more than just 20-30 year old white and Asian dudes writing it, because software isn’t just used by 20-30 year old white and Asian dudes. It’s used by everyone. The people writing it have a heavy hand in how it comes out.
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I very respectfully suggest that you check if "dudes" may contain a sexist stereotype. Most software is written by slightly autistic men and women, with autistic men outnumbering autistic women 5:1. Most UX design is done by non-autistic women and men, with women at >50%.
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Oh no, by "dudes" I meant men. My whole point is there should be more diversity in the people writing software because the people who are use it and are affected by it are diverse. I've never seen that autism assertion.
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