Reflecting on all the times in my career as a software engineer I have been told that, yes, things were a bit unfair to me as a woman, but that I was being a trailblazer, I was the one discovering and establishing the path that would enable others to follow.

But you go back to the 70s and you see the same number of women programmers, being fed that exact same line
And in the 80s
and the 90s
and so on to today. The "trailblazer" narrative is a lie told by managers to make themselves feel better

@Xibanya

#AdaLovelace:

"fuck the manbabies, #women were here first"

(i may be paraphrasing, uh, slightly)

#programming

@Xibanya

#GraceHopper:

"Preach it, sister!"

(again, just some slight paraphrasing)

#programming #women

@Xibanya

#MargaretHamilton:

"That's right sisters! But a little help here please?"

😆

Ok, I'll stop. The point is made. There is no #programming without #women. woe to any manbaby who forgets

@benroyce @Xibanya But you might go on with math 🙂
One of the greatest mathematicians of all time.
Just in case you want to understand what I am talking about:
https://math.uchicago.edu/~may/REU2017/REUPapers/Hudgins.pdf

@ralph @Xibanya

it's endless the contributions #women have made to #STEM

always overlooked and snubbed

random example

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lise_Meitner

"Despite the many honours that Meitner received in her lifetime, she did not receive the Nobel Prize while it was awarded to Otto Hahn for the discovery of nuclear fission... Meitner was the one who told Hahn and Strassman to test their radium in more detail, and it was she who told Hahn that it was possible for the nucleus of uranium to disintegrate"

Lise Meitner - Wikipedia