May 19

Why we need to keep talking about women in tech

Update:May 15, 2012 in the wake of this article, Christiane Vejlo’s English-language account was posted on Reddit, and Dell has apologized on its Google+ page for hiring Mads Christensen to speak at its Copenhagen summit. “Dell sincerely apologizes for these comments,” they wrote, saying also, “[g]oing forward, we will be more careful selecting speakers at Dell events.”

Update:11:31 a.m. PT

a lot of women in tech, including me, don’t like to spend a lot of time talking about being a woman in tech. in fact, on a panel of female journalists I was recently on, one of them suggested that we don’t need to keep talking about the dearth of women in the tech industry, that it’s a problem that will solve itself or is well on the way to being solved.

Unfortunately, as I was recently reminded, that’s not true. There’s not only a persistent absence of women in the fastest-growing economic sector in the world, there are toxic and dangerous attitudes that make that sector persistently unwelcome for women.

One-minute Molly Rant: keep talking about women in tech

Last month, Dell held a summit in Copenhagen, Denmark. Michael Dell himself keynoted the event, whose crowd included some 800 Dell employees and partners, and one female journalist: Christiane Vejlo of the Danish gadget blog Elektronista.

Dell’s Danish arm hired, as emcee and entertainer for the day, a performer named Mads Christensen, who is a well-known provocateur in Danish media circles. according to Vejlo and a few English-language Danish blogs, he’s primarily known for making racist, sexist, and other inflammatory comments in public.

Translation of Mads Christensen’s comment: "There are almost no girls in this room, and I am happy."

(Credit:Christiane Vejlo)

He continued the streak that day. Vejlo live-tweeted the event and Christensen’s comments as they unfolded: for example, his opening line, roughly translated as, “There are almost no girls in this room, and I am happy. why are you here at all?” “Gender quotas are still fairly healthy in your industry,” he went on.

On innovation, the emcee who directly followed Michael Dell on-stagecommented that “All the great inventions are from men; we can thank women for the rolling pin.” and he ended his comments by saying IT was the last bastion for men, and that they should let the mantra “shut up, b–ch” hiss out from between their teeth. All to laughter and applause from that collection of some 800 IT professionals, overwhelmingly male. Dell’s Danish director, Nicolai Moresco, reportedly praised Christensen’s performance onstage as he thanked the emcee for his comments.

Translation of Mads Christensen’s comment: "All the good inventions are from men. we can thank women for the rolling pin."

(Credit:Christiane Vejlo )

Now, happily, the reporting of the incident caused a minor sensation — although one that was largely confined to Denmark. a few female bloggers picked up the story and Moresco apologized, after a fashion (he’s sorry you feel that way). last I heard, he still has his job, which is frankly unacceptable.

we contacted Dell for comment, and here’s what Kelly McGinnis, Dell’s vice president of global communications, had to say about the matter:

We can tell you that the moderator’s attempted humor does not reflect Dell’s values, or its strong record on and commitment to diversity and equal opportunity. Dell has been recognized for its diversity practices, including by Working Mother magazine, which has named Dell four consecutive years to its best 100 companies in the U.S. in addition, Dell’s Women Powering Business initiative strives to help women entrepreneurs and technologists expand their networks while offering capabilities to help them use technology to do more.

Christensen, meanwhile, clarified in the Danish press that he thought IT pros should be saying “shut up, b–ch” to their wives, not female co-workers.

First, imagine if something like that had happened in the U.S., at an event where the CEO of a major publicly traded company was the keynote speaker. Everyone involved would be either fired or frantically apologizing, and that should be happening now.

Second, Dell in particular ought to be extra sensitive to the topic, after intense criticism in 2009 for a Netbook marketing campaign that suggested women only want computers for shopping and calorie counting. that was the same year, by the way, that Dell paid almost $10 million to settle a gender discrimination lawsuit from its employees over equal pay.

Couple all of that with the fact that women run just 3.6 percent of Fortune 500 companies, and we think that’s a remarkable achievement. Facebook’s board of directors, quite famously at this point, includes exactly zero females, despite 58 percent of its users being women, and in spite of COO Sheryl Sandberg being possibly the strongest Silicon Valley advocate for gender equality (and going home to your kids at 5:30 p.m.).

And all of that is in spite of actual research suggesting that Fortune 500 companies benefit richly from having three or more women on their boards, in both financial and product development terms. yet even women who manage to get into tech, flee the industry in droves, and most of them say the hostile environment is the reason why.

As long as women continue to be underrepresented, they can continue to be abused and mocked in private. very few men in America would ever stand on a stage and say the kinds of things Christensen said in Denmark, but that doesn’t mean they don’t say them (or think them) in the board rooms of this country and others. keep talking about it, everyone — men and women. this discussion is far from over.

Editors’ note, 11:31 a.m. PT: this story was updated with comment from Dell.

Why we need to keep talking about women in tech

Apr 14

Windows 8: Stuck in the Eye of Tablet-PC Hurricane

are tablets truly replacement for the PC? The debate rages on.

In the most basic and practical sense, sure they are. they are thin and light and fun and deliver a fast and fuss-free computing experience. If all you use a computer for is to surf the web, email, post photos to Facebook and do online bill paying, then a tablet will replace your PC quite well.

But can it replace the increasingly thin and light laptops (i.e. ultrabooks) that many of us use for work? Personally I don't think we're there yet.

Although there are plenty of Bluetooth keyboards that work with the iPad, the lack of a physical keyboard out-of-the-box is still a tablet drawback for doing serious work. the absence of a full Microsoft Office suite is another shortcoming (though Office cloud-based products like OnLive and CloudOn have been getting notice). Tablets also don't allow you to multi-task between apps and windows the way a PC can. and for those who aren't so touch-feely about multi-touch, most tablets do not support a mouse.

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this is not the final word on this debate as the tablet market is unfolding in real time all around us. I just think that to engage in productive, 10-apps-open-at-a-time-on-a-big screen kind of work, the PC, and its trusty keyboard, powerful processing and large-scale storage, is still where it's at.

Gartner reported that PC sales surprisingly grew by 2 percent in the first quarter of 2012, beating projections of a 1.2 percent decline for the quarter. yet it's undeniable that tablets are growing at a much faster rate, and eating into PC sales. It's pretty much a runaway train.

how will all of this affect Windows 8? Adversely, I would say. In many ways, Microsoft's pending version of Windows is caught in a perfect storm. and the prediction numbers do not work in its favor.

In addition to its PC sales report, Gartner also recently unveiled its tablet predictions for the next five years. According to Gartner's stats, Microsoft will have only 8 percent of the tablet market in 2013 (to be fair, Windows 8 won't even be released until this fall), and only 12 percent of the tablet market by 2016.

the iPad will dominate in the same time period, with Android gaining on the iPad each year, according to Gartner. By 2016, Gartner predicts, 369 million tablets will be sold globally, with Apple claiming about 46 percent of them.

Lord only knows how many of those 369 million tablets will be bought in place of a Windows PC.

If Microsoft is left with only 12 percent of the tablet market in 2016, it really needs the PC market to stay alive and it needs users to embrace the Metro user interface that runs on Windows 8. On a tablet Metro has serious potential, but on a PC it's just plain awkward and reviews of the Windows 8 public beta have been mixed at best.

Having fewer overall Windows-based devices in the world, particularly the business world, is obviously a king-size problem for Microsoft. As more businesses allow BYOD (bring your own device) programs, an influx of iOS and Android devices are soon to follow. actually, BYOD is already happening.

yet BYOD and the consumerization of IT presents a perilous situation for Microsoft because it has long used Windows as the foundation for pushing its lucrative suite of Office business apps (Sharepoint, Lync, Exchange etc). When workers BYOD, they are not bringing Windows devices, at least not as much as they would have three or four years ago.

from where I stand, the PC should remain the de facto machine for doing serious work. It should never die, just get slightly thinner and lighter, and co-exist with the more playful and portable tablet.

But if the PC does shuffle off this mortal coil due to a permanent turn to tablets, then Microsoft better make damn sure all its software works on iOS and Android.

Windows 8: Stuck in the Eye of Tablet-PC Hurricane