Bennett Todd wrote:
is typically a place and time where folks get really, really obsessed: somewhere in the late teens or early 20s, circumstances (often college) leave the obsessing types spending nearly every waking hour concentrating on computers, for a span of years. This tends to weed out the folks who aren't already more or less social rejects, and that in turn leads to a real gender bias, in our society.
I do hate to extend this, but I thought one more person's experience may be relevant. My wife and I met in our late teens and I was pretty obsessive about computers. She wasn't, but she got the bug and it hasn't been the same since (she actually had a computer and was programming before I was but had overprotective parents that were highly concerned that the technology they couldn't understand could be destroyed with software - a phobia that many parents instill in their children, more with daughters than sons.) Now we're more or less social rejects with three kids and still have more computers than people in our home. We met over the Internet in 1988 and I'll say that as a cash-strapped person back then, the Internet saved us thousands of $$ in phone bills, making the first "killer-app" of the net expedited and inexpensive communications. My wife and I constantly talk shop, but she's not hardware oriented and I'm only somewhat software oriented. I do the hardware and she builds the software to glue it all together. In an IEEE Spectrum recently it was noted that the gender gap may be due to women relying more on image than men. I almost agree with this opinion as our society has taught women to present a nice image rather than getting ahead based on the merits of their work. Many women in my workplace are terrified of being judged solely on their merit, especially if pushed in a technical direction. Our evaluation process is based more on image than substance and this impacts both men and women. Granted that highly meritorious work will result in a better evaluation, it is merely a compensating factor, not the means of measurement. In many areas, mediocrity is accepted if the proper social image is presented. In any relatively new industry, merit can be the only benchmark and that terrifies many people because it establishes an essentially binary judgement scale where there can be no compensating factors. -Nathan Lane