Useful Links: Open Letter, Blog Action Day, Free Culture, Usability, HTML5

An Open Letter to Mark Shuttleworth at Geek Feminism Blog points the spotlight at another incident in this year’s round of dismissive-to-women conference remarks.

The topic for Blog Action Day this year is Climate Change. Hope all you bloggers out there will participate.

.eduGuru reviews Lawrence Lessig’s Free Culture and says,

This is not a book about education or law, this is a book designed to educate.  Because of our proximity to such issues, I think it is critical that we all educate ourselves on the changes that are taking place, and the impact it is going to have on us as we move forward and try to support schools, professors, and students in their pursuit of an open learning environment.

10 Useful Usability Findings and Guidelines at Smashing Magazine has some excellent guidelines. This would make a good reading assignment for web design students.

The HTML5 DOM and RDFa talks about a known problem,  in a clear and interesting way.

Events: Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing

Grace Hopper Celebration 2009

The Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing will be September 30 – October 3, 2209. Registration closes on September 25. Here’s what it’s about:

The Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing is a series of conferences designed to bring the research and career interests of women in computing to the forefront. Presenters are leaders in their respective fields, representing industrial, academic and government communities. Leading researchers present their current work, while special sessions focus on the role of women in today’s technology fields, including computer science, information technology, research and engineering.

Past Grace Hopper Celebrations have resulted in collaborative proposals, networking, mentoring, and increased visibility for the contributions of women in computing.

There’s a full schedule, including a robotics workshop, which sounds like fun. Free onsite daycare and other women friendly features make this a great conference to attend. Men, of course, can celebrate women in computing, too.

Again with the pr0n

Prude or Professional at Geek Girls Guide is the first of two articles with tons of comments about the pornographic images used in a Flash instructional session at the recent Flash developer conference in Minneapolis. Perhaps you remember a similar incident at a Rails conference that I wrote about in  A Tipping Point for Women in Tech: Here’s Hoping. This time the Flash conference organizer took full responsibility in We’re In This Together, by Courtney Remes, Dave Schroeder, Nancy Lyons and Meghan Wilker.

What the hell is wrong with these men? Are they so inept that they don’t realize they are offending half the population? Or that they look like fools?

My experience at Women Who Tech

Participating in the second annual Women Who Tech TeleSummit was easy and fascinating. I signed in to three sessions. These will mostly be available as poscasts at the Women Who Tech site, so I’m not going to attempt liveblogging. I’ll give you a few highlights that I found particularly worthy or fascinating or just plain quotable.

The conference used phone-in conference calls for audio, and web features that provided a view of slides and a chat window. Over 600 women participated. The stature and accomplishments of the women on the panels was impressive. These are women who are making things happen in the world.

The Feminine Mystique

This panel featured Leslie Hawthorn from Google, Joan Blades from Moveon.org and Moms Rising, Tracy Viselli from Reno Fabulous Media. The moderator was Holly Ross from NTEN.

Holly: We are building an industry in which women are equal. Embrace your nurturing as an asset.

Tracy: What or who do you think about when you hear the word “expert?” Women approach the idea of expertise to their own detriment. Women think they have to know everything before using the label expert. Embrace your expertise. Jump in whenever you have a chance and don’t worry about not knowing everything. Women need to change the way they think about expertise.

Leslie: Teams and groups rely on women to have ‘soft’ skills, yet this is viewed as not quantifiable/valuable and so less valuable. The ‘soft’ skills are often the one factor that means success for teams and groups, yet the skills remain undervalued.

Discussion on Leslie’s comments concluded that women who don’t play the nurturing role and are all business get called the B word. Yet all women aren’t comfortable in the role and shouldn’t be expected to be.

Social media is changing the way technology is discussed because it’s about community building.

Joan: A bias against mothers exists in hiring and career advancement. Women who are mothers are 79% less likely to get a job in tech with an identical resume to a non-mother. Modern, virtual work has opened up the opportunity for women to succeed.

Work has to have the flexibility for both parents to be able to share caregiving. Changes in attitudes about fathers being caregivers while working might create helpful changes in the attitude about women as workers while parenting. Policy issues such as child care, health care and other work culture factors like number of vacation days all need to change, too.

Changes in culture around work and parenting are changes that would make the workplace better for everyone, including non-parents. It would also help the people who are intelligent and creative but not 80-hours-a-week-workers rise to the top. Glorifying extreme work is not healthy. Everyone should not have to aspire to it.

Tools Galore in Online Communications

This panel included Natalie Foster from DNC, Rebecca Moore from Google Earth Outreach, Laura Quinn from Idealware. The moderator was Amy Sample Ward from NetSquared.

Laura: Your website is the base of your online communication. What does it say about you? You need content management tools. Email is still critical for almost every organization to reach out and keep in touch, call for action, or whatever. The details in an email are critical: subject line, from line, graphic design, clear communication. Two good standalone broadcast email tools: verticalresponse.com and networkforgood.org. Don’t forget your constituent database.

Natalie: When creating social media campaigns, know what you want to get out of it. Then prioritize the tools so you get the best return on investment. Networks of trust that come from social networks are powerful. Watch the people who are successful on Facebook or MySpace and see how they do it. She also talked about Twitter.

Rebecca: She talked about Google’s mapping tools. Neo-geography. Google earth can create audio narrated presentations about many topics. Google earth presents complex information in vivid ways that are easy to comprehend. Can illustrate logging and mountain-top-removal coal mining in ways that make the implications of obscure proposals understandable. Resulted in legislative action based on Google earth presentation. Also connected people to their personal environmental impact by connecting a zip code from anywhere in the country to the particular mountain top in Appalachia that was being destroyed to provide power. She also talked about the genocide in Darfur visuals on Google earth. If you can use an Excel spreadsheet, you can create a compelling visualization on Google earth.

When thinking about tools to add to your toolkit, start by asking what it is you are trying to accomplish.

Innovation and Tech Career Reinvention

This panel featured Christine Adzich from Big Picture Productions, Sheryl Chamberlain from EMC, Megan Fitzgerald from Career By Choice, and Nancy Wheeler from Intel. The moderator was Dee McCrorey from Risktaking for Success.

Christine: When changing fields, come in as a student and open yourself up to growth. You can still contribute a great deal, even as a student. Be willing to make a lot of mistakes.

Nancy: Take failure as an opportunity to learn. When you are a manager, try not to limit your expectations of what people can do.

Megan: 80% of skills we take with us to any position are related to emotional intelligence: initiative, optimism, adaptability, etc. Not job specific competencies, therefore competencies you can bring with you to a new job. Reflect on your qualities and strengths. Skills are related to these things. Your value to an organization is related to these qualities and strengths. She is @expatcoachmegan on Twitter.

Think about portable assets and then look for projects that play to your skills. Develop a list of questions or a metric that will let you evealuate potential projects based on your skills and work style and the working environment. Set yourself up for success by choosing projects that fit your profile.

Sheryl: EMC has created internal communities using social media as well as external communities. She’s created leadership tools to share both internally and externally. Recognize your vision then build a community around it.

Megan: Understand your personal brand and unique value. Does the information online about you right now support your vision for yourself? Create a professional bio picture. Be active in the right space.

Sheryl: Leave behind the negative things and move on.

Christine: When transferring influence to others, ask questions rather than always giving information. Get a sense of what people are looking for before you try to work with them.

Nancy: When transferring influence, begin deferring publicly to the new mentee.

Tech notes

Some technical asides on the conference: I used TweetGrid to follow the Twitter stream and ran three simultaneous searches: women who tech, #womenwhotech, and #WWT. I like the real time refresh rate on TweetGrid and found it a helpful tool. The audio conference ran on Ready Talk, which worked fairly well. There were glitches, but mostly things went as they should. I called into the audio lines using Skype. Skype sometimes breaks up a bit, and it did during this conference, but no more than usual with concalls on Skype.

The biggest difficulty people had with the sessions was that the same numbers and entry codes were used repeatedly. If you logged on or called in a minute or two early, you got the tail end of a previous session instead of the beginning of the session you were attending. This meant logging out, waiting a bit, then coming back in.

A TeleSummit for Women Who Tech

Women Who Tech is a telesummit. In its second year (the first year was a big hit), the telesummit uses the Internet and plain old phone conferencing to pull together a diverse group of women in a format that allows them to talk tech. More . . .

Women Who Tech is a telesummit. In its second year (the first year was a big hit), the telesummit uses the Internet and plain old phone conferencing to pull together a diverse group of women in a format that allows them to talk tech. The date for the telesummit is Tuesday, May 12 (right, that’s tomorrow). Registration is still open for some of the panels. It’s not to late to get in on the excitement.

You pay a mere $10 to register for your first panel. After that, you receive an email that allows you entry to two more panels. The panels begin at 11AM Eastern time and the final one is at 5PM Eastern Time. Where else can you attend a major conference for $10?

The wide ranging possibilities for learning and growing from year’s panels include:

  • launching your own startup
  • women and open source
  • breaking through the digital ceiling
  • the feminine mystique
  • tech marketing
  • social networks and diversity barriers
  • online tools
  • career innovative
  • gender and class in Web 2.0
  • video activism
  • transparency in government
  • social media ROI

Each panel lasts 50 minutes. I signed up for one at 11AM, 1PM and 3PM, which gives me plenty of time between panels to keep up with the rest of the things going on in my day. Maybe even get out of my pjs and go outside to water the tomatoes.

I’ve given you the what, when, where, and how. That leaves the topics of who and why.

There are two parts to the who: who created this and who is on the panels. You can see the founders bios at the site. Among them are Allyson Kapin, Eve Fox, Judity Freeman, Rosalyn Lemieux, Jen Moseley, Kelly O’Neal, Holly Ross, and Katrin Verclas. This group came together with the goals of giving women in technology greater representation, breaking down barriers for women in tech, and collecting information about women in tech for networking and conferencing purposes.

Who are the panelists leading each of the sessions?

  • Launching Your Own Startup:
    Rashmi Sinha, SlideShare, Amy Muller, Get Satisfaction, Lisa Stone, BlogHer. Moderator: Mary Hodder
  • Women and Open Source:
    Michelle Murrian, NOSI, Amy De Groff, Howard County Library. Moderator: Amanda Steinberg, Soapbxx
  • Breaking Through the Digital Ceiling:
    Lynne D. Johnson, Fast Company, Charlene Li, Co-Author of Groundswell and Founder of Altimeter, Susan Mernit, Consultant, Connie Reece, Every Dot Connects and Social Media Club. Moderator: Allyson Kapin
  • Feminine Mystique:
    Leslie Hawthorn, Google, Joan Blades, Moveon.org and Moms Rising, Tracy Viselli, Reno Fabulous Media. Moderator: Holly Ross, NTEN
  • Tech Marketing in a Recession:
    Fran Boscker, Vantage Communications, Hilary Zwerdling, M+R Strategic Services. Moderator: Jennifer Kutz, Vantage Communications
  • Social Networks and Diversity Barriers:
    Shireen Mitchell and Glennette Clark, CITI
  • Tools Galore in Online Communications:
    Natalie Foster, DNC, Rebecca Moore, Google Earth Outreach, Laura Quinn, Idealware. Moderator: Amy Sample Ward, NetSquared
  • Innovation and Tech Career Reinvention:
    Christine Adzich, Big Picture Productions, Sheryl Chamberlain, EMC, Megan Fitzgerald, Career By Choice, Nancy Wheeler, Intel. Moderator: Dee McCorery, Risktaking for Success, LLC
  • What Shirky Didn’t Tell Us:
    Allison Fine, techPresident and Personal Democracy Forum, Shireen Mitchell, Digital Sistas, Tanya Tarr, AFSCME. Moderator: Deanna Zandt, Consultant
  • Video Activism:
    Ramya Raghavan, YouTube, Yvette Matisse Bustos Hawkes, Witness, Erica Priggen, Free Range Graphics. Moderator: Shirley Sexton, See3 Communications.
  • Transparency in Government:
    Ryan Alexander, Taxpayers for Common Sense and Sheila Krumholz, Center for Responsive Politics. Moderator: Nancy Watzman, Sunlight Foundation
  • Social Media ROI:
    Heather Holdridge, Care2, Cheryl Contee, Fission Strategy. Moderator: Monique Elwell, Conversify

Amazing panels, amazing panelists, ten bucks—go register!

The podcasts from the 2008 telesummit are all online. While you are exploring the website, don’t overlook the excellent collection of articles and information in the Resources section.

Follow on Twitter: #womenwhotech and Women Who Tech.

Cross posted at BlogHer.

Useful Links: Twitter Presentation, Adobe Instruction. Law & Science

A Twitter talk, some great instructional materials, and a few questions.

Laura Fitton’s talk about Twitter at Google Tech Talk is really interesting. It’s on YouTube. She’s @Pistachio.

Adobe Instructional Resources has resources for all the Adobe products as well as what they call career skills. Great information for instructors and learners.

Law and Science from Female Science Professor is a reflection on the new opening on the Supreme Court and science. “Why has the number of women reaching the upper levels of the legal profession changed so much in the past 20 years but the same is not the case for science and engineering in academia, government, or the private sector?”

A Tipping Point for Women in Tech? Here’s hoping.

Once upon a time there was a fellow who had a presentation to give at a tech conference. He planned to talk about code and databases. He thought it would be a good idea to make his presentation interesting, since his topics were a bit of a yawn. He decided it would grab attention and be funny if he interspersed images of women in pornographic poses among his slides of code and bullet points.

It did grab attention. But it wasn’t funny.

That fellow was Matt Aimonetti. The tech conference was the Golden Gate Ruby Conference. The presentation opens with this image.

opening screen of the Matt Aimonetti presentation

Here’s the full presentation: CouchDB: Perform like a pr0n star. I suggest you look through the slides and form an opinion of your own before reading on. It is enlightening to read the comments following the presentation, too.

There weren’t many women in the audience, but there were women in the audience. This was a national conference, not a gathering of teenager boys in a smelly upstairs bedroom. The women in the audience found the slides objectionable. Quite a few of the men in the audience did, too.

The first comments about the presentation, naturally, appeared on Twitter. Use the hashtag #gogaruco if you’d like to read through them all. Notable among those tweets was this one by dhh:

tweet by dhh

Who is dhh? The creator of Ruby on Rails!

dhh Twitter profile

Yes, the creator of Ruby on Rails thought it was funny. He wasn’t the only male who defended the presentation as edgy and funny and appropriate.

Rails activist Mike Gunderloy didn’t agree. In fact, in A Painful Decision, he said,

There has been some discussion in recent days in the Rails community about appropriate conference presentations, whether women feel welcome in the Rails community, and related issues. I don’t intend to review the entire mess here – you can find it if you want it. For what it’s worth, I think the original presentation was an inappropriate and regrettable mistake. However, far more disturbing to me are the reactions to the discussion on the part of some of the Rails community.
. . .
But unfortunately for me, in parallel to the public discussion there have been private ones. I can’t reveal details without breaking confidences, but suffice it to say that a significant number of Rails core contributors – with leadership (if that’s the right word) from DHH – apparently feel that being unwelcoming and “edgy” is not just acceptable, but laudable. The difference between their opinions and mine is so severe that I cannot in good conscience remain a public spokesman for Rails.

So, effective immediately, I’m resigning my position with the Rails Activists.

Aimee, a Rails programmer herself, writes at A little place of calm. Here’s part of her reaction in Distressing times for the Rails community.

Unexpected pornography at a professional conference surprises me, shocks me a little. I wonder whether Matt Aimonetti, at any point during the preparation of that presentation, thought “This is likely to offend some people”, and if so, whether Matt decided not to care.

The refusal of some Rails representatives to even acknowledge that there is a problem angers me.

Aimee’s comments seem relevant to an article by Raina Kelley in Newsweek called Generation Me.

Perhaps, one day, we will say that the recession saved us from a parenting ethos that churns out ego-addled spoiled brats. And though it is too soon to tell if our economic free fall will cure America of its sense of economic privilege, it has made it much harder to get the money together to give our kids six-figure sweet-16 parties and plastic surgery for graduation presents, all in the name of “self esteem.” And that’s a good thing, because as Jean Twenge and W. Keith Campbell point out in their excellent book “The Narcissism Epidemic,” released last week, we’ve built up the confidence of our kids, but in that process, we’ve created a generation of hot-house flowers puffed with a disproportionate sense of self-worth (the definition of narcissism) and without the resiliency skills they need when Mommy and Daddy can’t fix something.

I extrapolate from this discussion of a narcissism disorder among a percentage of generation me to mean that perhaps a certain breed of geek thinks that his opinions are universal and no one could possibly be offended by what he finds funny. The Rails community needs a dose of reality to wake them from their narcissistic adolesecent male world view.

Matt Amionetti did respond to the uproar he wrought, on his blog The Merblist in On Engerdering Strong Reactions.

To start with, I would like to make it clear to everyone that I do sincerely care about the larger gender issues that my presentation touched off. I have also replied and otherwise corresponded with everyone who has contacted me about my presentation, just as I have tried to reply to all of the blog posts that have been brought to my attention. At this point, however, it is clear that this issue has grown too large to be resolved through one-on-one contact, hence this public statement.

He says that the conference organizers warned conference goers that materials in his presentation might be offensive to some, so anyone who came did so after being warned and knew what they were getting into. He plans to attend a panel about Women in Rails at an O’Reilly Rails Conference on May 5. The speakers at this panel discussion are all women: Desi McAdam (Hashrocket Inc and DevChix Inc), Sarah Mei (LookSmart), Lori Olson (Dragon Sharp Consulting). (That would be an interesting place to lurk.)

Liz Keogh read Matt’s justification for his presentation and wrote a brilliant analysis of how the brain associates information. Her article is I am not a Pr0n Star: avoiding unavoidable associations. I hope you read all of it. Here are some highlights.

The human brain consists of a bunch of neurons, between which connections and pathways are built. Those pathways form associations. There are associations of which we’re conscious, associations of which we’re not conscious, and a blurred space in between.
. . .
Human beings learn associations by – amongst other things – proximity; either in time, or in place. That is; they will build associations more easily if two or more things are experienced close together.

If you’ve watched Matt’s slideshow, and you find yourself using CouchDB on a project in the future, will you be thinking of his slideshow? It was very memorable. I think I will find it hard in the future to disassociate that slideshow from the featured product. That’s a conscious association I’ve built. I’m aware of it.

There’s a subconscious association going on in that show, too; another proximity which is harder to spot. We’ve just experienced words of technology – key phrases like scalability, REST, public interfaces – with images of women whom we’re told are available for visual sexual gratification. There are a few men in some of the images; they appear to me to be in positions of power and influence. The images of women, on the other hand, tend to be submissive. So we’re learning, subconsciously, that women associated with technology are also associated with sexual gratification and submissiveness. (The only strong women in the slideshow are associated with conflict, which we try to avoid.)
. . .
If you were sitting in Matt’s presentation, or have experienced similar presentations or associations in the past:

  • you might consciously choose to wear a topless women on your t-shirt, because your brain subconsciously confirms that it’s acceptable.
  • You might expect women to be more submissive; to accept delegated tasks more easily, or question process less, or accept lower pay.
  • You might find it uncomfortable to have a female manager or team lead.
  • You might cause the women around you start dressing in less feminine ways, to distance themselves from any association.
  • You might erroneously think you have a chance of scoring with your female colleague (notwithstanding cases of genuine mutual attraction).
  • You might not expect the woman on your team to be able to teach you anything new.

And, if you’re Matt, or one of the many commenters whose opinions I’ve read, you might not completely understand the backlash.

Two bloggers have published compilations of some of the comments and tweets on the slide presentation. Burningbird published her collection in Open Arms. Hackety gathered even more comments in A Selection of Thoughts from Actual Women. These are helpful compilations of comments.

One of the many women who commented was Sarah at the evolving ultrasaurus. She was one of the women who were actually at the conference. She posted gender and sex at gogaruco.

What most pisses me off is that I had to write this blog post, instead of one about Ruby & CouchDB, which is a far more interesting topic.

It isn’t just the Rails community. A friend of mine recently got what she thought was friendly mentoring from a famous-name male in the tech world. She was dismayed when she discovered that he expected sex in return for the career advancement help. When she refused, he started naming names of women in tech who supposedly did offer up the requested sexual favors. He regards the women in tech as his for the plucking and thinks he is perfectly justified in behaving that way. (This is a married man, by the way.) My friend will write about this herself once she cools down a bit, but it does bring up the question of whether it’s more than just the objectification of women but outright exploitation that keeps women away from conferences.

Years of discussion about the minuscule showing of women at tech conferences, the dearth of women in computer sciences, and the lack of sensitivity toward women and minorities by conference organizers has not come close to galvanizing opinion like this one act of monumental unenlightment at a Rails conference. I hope both women and men will continue to make their voices heard on this issue until finally, FINALLY, the men in tech start to hear what the women in tech are saying.

I hope women are saying something like this: “We’re mad as hell and we’re not going to take it anymore!”

Cross posted at BlogHer.