Who is considered a successful female programmer and why are they considered to be successful?
closed as not programming related by Luke, gnovice, raven, Shog9, Greg Hewgill Nov 4 at 18:30 |
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Ada Lovelace, because she was arguably the first. |
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Grace Hopper, for sure. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Hopper |
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Programmer and author Kathy Sierra. She is the co-creator of the Head First book series. She also wrote some insightful blog posts about usability and cognitive science for programmers in the blog Creating Passionate Users until she had to stop early 2007 due to blogger harassment. |
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Sara Ford is a good source for Visual Studio tips :) |
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Being a Gamer, I usually think about Roberta Williams and Dani Bunten first when I think about famous women in programming. |
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Ada Lovelace |
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Barbara Liskov is pretty important -- not really a programmer per se, but close enough. |
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Tess Ferrandez is doing some really advanced debugging-stuff in .NET, which she posts on her blog. I rarely understand anything from it, but it's really interesting. Plus, from what I understand, she's from Sweden, so that's a big bonus :) |
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Leah Culver - author of Pownce. - VP of Search in Google Marissa Meyer |
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Wikipedia lists a few Women in computing |
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Also interesting: Joanna Rutkowska of Blue Pill fame. She's a highly respected researcher in virtualization and security. |
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Allison Randal, Perl hacker extraordinaire! (I also agree with the Audrey Tang post too.) |
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Not a programmer as such but Molly E. Holzschlag is quite prominent in the web design/development field. |
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Erica Sadun famous iPhone developer |
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Rebecca Wirfs-Brock
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Kathleen Dollard in the windows world. |
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Audrey Tang big in the Perl community. |
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Dr Pat Selinger one of the leading programmers who created System R, the grand-daddy of all relational databases. IBM Fellow. |
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Jean Sammet, outspoken ex-president of ACM. |
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Dori Smith of JavaScript World and co-author of the following titles: JavaScript & Ajax for the Web: Visual QuickStart Guide, 6th edition (with Tom Negrino) Dreamweaver CS3 for Windows and Mac: Visual QuickStart Guide (with Tom Negrino) Java 2 for the WWW: Visual QuickStart Guide Mac OS X Unwired (with Tom Negrino) ...and a very thorough training series entitled "JavaScript Essential Training" (for Lynda.com) |
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Kimberly Tripp, SQL Server Goddess
"Kimberly L. Tripp is a SQL Server MVP and a Microsoft Regional Director and has worked with computers since 1985. Her career with database technologies began with IBM in 1988 and with Microsoft SQL Server™ in 1990. Since 1995, Kimberly has worked as a Speaker, Writer, Trainer and Consultant." |
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Melinda Varian - The doyenne of CMS Pipelines** ** CMS Pipelines (that's VM/CMS, not Content Management System) - How Unix pipelines would have been had they been done right! |
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Adele Goldberg), one of the inventors of SmallTalk |
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Kim Polese. She worked on very early Java incaranations at Sun (where she is likely the source of the .class file header identifier: 0xCAFEBABE) before founding co-founding Marimba. Here's more. |
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Bea Stollnitz - WPF Framework developer |
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Sarah Sharp. |
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