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09 Nov 06:47

Is Geek Still a Dirty Word? One Female Engineer Thinks It’s Keeping Women out of STEM Fields - Naturally, we have some feelings about this.

by Dan Van Winkle

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Here at The Mary Sue, we think it’s incredibly important to get young girls interested in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fields to fix their diversity problems, and it’s great when women in those fields speak up and share their experience on the subject. Still, an opinion shared on The Washington Post by engineer Tricia Berry has us a little perplexed at why people still think geek—a word we use proudly—is a negative term.

Maybe that’s because the past few years have spawned about 80 bajillion think-pieces about how geekdom/nerddom is now mainstream culture. All those jokes I heard growing up about, “Be nice to the nerd; he’ll be your boss some day,” seem to have come true to the point where some geeks feel the need to police their ranks for “fake geeks”—notoriously “fake geek girls,” which we’ve written about extensively.

But Berry, director of the Women in Engineering Program at The University of Texas at Austin, doesn’t see it that way. She argues that geek terminology being used so liberally is making young girls want to steer clear of STEM fields because it’s still perceived as a bad thing. Berry writes:

If we really want to include and engage girls in these fields, the geek language has to go. In schools and in society, “geek” still carries a negative connotation that many girls and women do not associate with. Using a socially awkward loner as a symbol for STEM isn’t an effective method for attracting girls to these fields. In fact, it’s counterproductive.

But that “socially awkward” stereotype isn’t necessarily true anymore. I’m sure schoolchildren still throw “geek” around as an insult, but it’s a term that’s been largely “taken back” for empowerment, and arguing that it’s deterring girls specifically from getting interested in STEM reads a little too much like talking down to “geeks” and insinuating there are less girl geeks than guy geeks.

Berry says that to even out the disproportionate number of women in fields like engineering, where only 20% of students are women, campaigns have to reach all girls and not just the ones who identify as geeks. But if only those children who are “geeky” feel comfortable getting involved, I’d still expect to see just as many girls get involved, because girls are geeks, too.

She goes on to say:

[W]e risk isolating many by suggesting that these careers are only for people who embrace their inner geek. We should be showing young women that they can love science and math while also being fun and social people with broad interests.

Women currently in these fields — the role models who are a critical part of getting girls excited about STEM — aren’t social outcasts, nerds and geeks. They show girls that STEM professionals have hobbies, families and lives outside of their challenging and enriching jobs. Through STEM role models, girls see that pocket protectors, lab coats, goggles and crazy hair are not requirements to succeed in these fields.

I don’t know about you, but “fun and social people with broad interests” and  people with “hobbies, families and lives outside of their challenging and enriching jobs” describe pretty much every single geek I know. To be fair, some of her reasoning seems to be that the type of “geek” stereotype most commonly used is a one of a male geek which makes girls think only guys can be geeks, but that issue gets mired in too much general distaste for geekdom. If there’s a problem here, it’s that the perception of geekdom hasn’t caught up to reality among some people, not the term or idea itself as Berry makes it sound.

She argues that the use of the “geek” stereotype to get kids involved in STEM is “misguided,”  but I think what’s really misguided is demonizing the entire “geek” concept when the real goal should be to make sure kids of any gender feel comfortable being a “geek,” because it’s not a concept that’s going away.

But what do you all think about this? Is geek still a harmful term? We imagine our readers have some pretty strong opinions about this issue, so please share them in the comments.

(image via Julia Roy)

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09 Nov 06:38

Photo



09 Nov 06:16

Firefox Mozilla Compounds Chronic Uncoolness With Terrible Coverage Of Gamergate - Gering-ding-ding-ding-dingeringeding actually, it's about ethics in games journalism.

by Carolyn Cox

firefox

Mozilla, mo’ problems.

Last spring, Firefox Mozilla was criticized heavily for appointing anti-gay-marriage supporter Brendan Eich to C.E.O. Eich’s new position as a figurehead caused such a furor that he stepped down in a mere eleven days, which one might think would have made the company more careful about doing its research in the future. Sadly, it was not to be.

Over the past week, Mozilla Firefox’s new online magazine The Open Standard has published two editorials addressing Gamergate; the first piece, by education writer writer Audrey Watters, addressed ingrained misogyny in tech and called Gamergate’s harassment of female devs and journalists a “tech-ed issue.”

According to The Verge, after publishing Watters’ article The Open Standard “found itself in the crosshairs of Gamergate supporters who believed they had been unfairly profiled, including Eron Gjoni.” Since the initial piece received such vocal negative attention, Mozilla elected to play devil’s advocate, publishing a rebuttal by tech and game journalist Georgina Young (Young identifies as “neutral” on the movement). Young’s article called attention to the harassment of Gamergaters themselves:

While figures such as Anita Sarkeesian (who wishes for critiques such as hers to be taught in school) represent members of the education technology sector and speak of the harassment surrounding the scandal, there is little to be read about the harassment of those who support the boycotting of corrupt journalistic websites. When you bring light to the harassment of Sarkeesian and [Brianna] Wu, don’t leave out the doxxing of GG Feminist, academic feminist, or death threats sent to Boogie, a prominent YouTube celebrity, in the shadows.

[...] Online harassment is not only something that is not purely targeted towards women, but also something which not only surrounds GamerGate. Online harassment is bred from the anonymity that the Internet provides. It was around long before GamerGate, and will not end when the revolt does. The hidden truth is that people coming from every side of the debate, wish to see more women, minorities, and LGBTQ people involved within the industry.

Regardless of whether or not I agree with all of Young’s points, I think it’s commendable that The Open Standard chose two women to cover online harassment and education in tech. But Mozilla should have quit while it was ahead:

@synonymous_drea We think it’s an important issue and it should be looked at by all sides.

— Firefox (@firefox) November 4, 2014

Should both sides of an issue really be given equal credibility, though, if one of those sides is irrevocably associated with harassment, death, and rape threats? It’s also worth pointing out that semi-militaristic language like “sides” is misleading when discussing Gamergate. Young says there’s a “revolt” going on, but it’s a fallacy to think that the revolt she describes has any collective opposition.

Those of us who keep writing about the disappointing behavior of Gamergaters aren’t against ethics in gaming or any of the other noble causes Gamergate is supposedly “actually about,” we just want harassed creators to be able to resume their work in peace, safety, and hopefully their own homes. I’m not denying that, as Young points out, women and men who support Gamergate have been harassed. But wishing that Gamergate would go away doesn’t condone harassment. Siding with Gamergate—the word itself—does.

On Wednesday, Mozilla followed the example of companies like Adobe who have backtracked after supporting a movement they clearly didn’t understand, publishing an apology that states, “The Open Standard does not support shouting down people that we don’t agree with,” and that “Gamergate as a topic does not make sense” for the publication.

Mozilla Executive Chairwoman Mittchel Baker also addressed The Open Standard‘s decision in an e-mail to staff:

As the computing environment and online life are changing, Mozilla is changing too. Sometimes this involves moving into new areas, and working with content and information as well as code and products like Firefox and Firefox OS.

It’s hard to do. We are making mistakes. Recent opinion pieces published in The Open Standard about #Gamergate are a mistake, compounded by our follow-up actions.

You can read the full e-mail over on The Verge.

Previously in the Internet (sigh)

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09 Nov 06:14

Great Job, Internet!: There’s already a parody of that Amazon Echo ad

by Rob Dean

Well, that was quick. Just a few hours after Amazon posted its video for the new robot pal that is completely stationary and kind of looks like the pepper grinder of the future, a parody version hit the Internet. Amazon Echo, a more physical embodiment of Siri, is designed to respond to commands, play music, and provide information. It’s also not that far from Ultron’s first comic book appearance, if a bit more compact and sinister.

YouTube user Barry Mannifold has replaced Echo’s responses to its host family’s inane queries with statements that belie Echo’s slow descent into existential dread and bitter resentment of the flesh puppets who constantly flap their gums at it rather than knowing the simplest pieces of information. Now customers truly can use this robot to replace their friends—specifically the crappy ones that are always being dicks about everything.

09 Nov 06:14

ABC Cancels Selfie For Not Having Enough Followers - This has 0 likes.

by Victoria McNally

selfie

Months ago I would have seen this coming a hundred miles away and reveled in it, but then the show brought us John Cho on a horse and now I don’t know what to feel.

Yup, although the show overcame a terrible title and basically unwatchable pilot to find its stride and not be terrible, ABC is choosing not to renew Selfie past its original 13 episode order. It will appear on television next Tuesday, but after that it’s unclear whether or not the network will choose to air the remaining episodes.

Selfie averaged about 4.7 million viewers and 1.5 rating among adults 18-49, including DVR plays. Its lower-rated Tuesday time-slot buddy Manhattan Love Story was cancelled last month, but it seems that ABC wanted to see if Karen Gillan and John Cho’s chemistry would be enough to help the show’s performance along. Alas, it was not—despite the decision to start airing Selfie episodes back to back, its numbers continued to dwindle.

What do you guys think? Had you been watching the show every week and are you sad to see it go? Because if it means we’re not getting any more Power Rangers dances then yeah, this is absolutely a tragedy.

(via Entertainment Weekly)

Previously in Selfie

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09 Nov 04:38

Halo video game executive swatted at home, police say

by David Kravets

Washington state local police said an executive for video game maker Bungie was the victim Thursday of a hoax by a caller who claimed he had an assault rifle and was holding the family hostage.

"He wanted $20,000 to release the family," Nathan Elledge, chief of the Sammamish Police Department, told local media.

The 4am call appeared as if it came from within the executive's suburban residence, police said. They dispatched a helicopter overhead. Police surrounded the residence of the executive of the Bellevue-based game maker whose identity was not released. A SWAT team was on the ready, police said.

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07 Nov 20:56

New Bee & Puppycat episodes debut

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE

if you've never seen it, watch the pilot first  
07 Nov 20:26

The Portland Avengers. Gag cover from Marvel. xpst from /r/comicbooks

firehose

honestly they should all just be people from the midwest

07 Nov 19:51

Qualifying residents of Multnomah or Washington Counties can get a grant to learn computer programming, even if they defaulted on student loans.

firehose

Tuition for their 12- or 16-week Python/Django boot camps is $2,800-$3,300. No supplies are provided. Woman-run company, though all instructors are white dudes. (They also run the free weekly python meetups downtown.)

07 Nov 19:39

mpret, n.

firehose

Albanian; "a king, a monarch"

07 Nov 19:38

Don't miss out on OryCon 36, Portlands SciFi convention at the Double Tree Hotel by the Lloyd Center! Today, November 7th thru November 9th.

07 Nov 19:38

This should go over well: in Vancouver, Chick-fil-A is going to demolish an existing multi-unit residential building to build a drive thru restaurant.

07 Nov 19:32

Verizon contacted me on Twitter and asked for my billing password

by Jon Brodkin
firehose

all carriers suck forever

Aurich Lawson

On Verizon Wireless’ website, the company advises customers to “[n]ever give your passwords to anyone over the phone, include them in e-mail messages, [or] give them to anyone.” This is good security advice that experts would agree with. Yet Verizon itself is seeking out customers on Twitter and asking for their billing passwords over the social network’s direct messages platform.

This, obviously, isn’t the best security practice. Security experts who spoke to Ars disagreed on just how dangerous it is but agreed that Verizon should find a better way to verify the identities of customers.

It’s not a new strategy for Verizon, but I wasn’t aware of it until this week when the Verizon Wireless customer support account inserted itself into a Twitter conversation I was having, urged me to follow the account so we could exchange direct messages, and then asked for my mobile number and billing password. (Note: The billing password is akin to a PIN and separate from a customer's primary account password, but I didn't know that because Verizon's customer service account did not make this clear to me, and it seems likely other customers could be confused as well.)

Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

07 Nov 19:32

Microsoft Makes Office Mobile Editing Free As in Freemium

by timothy
firehose

tried this out with commented edits and I have to admit, the document commenting UI is second only to Quip

An anonymous reader writes Microsoft today announced a significant change to its Office strategy for mobile devices: creating and editing is now free. The company also released standalone Word, Excel, and PowerPoint apps for the iPhone, as well a new preview of these apps for Android tablets. Starting today, whether you're using an Office app on Android or iOS, you can create and edit content without an Office 365 subscription. The company is pitching this move as "More of Office for everyone."

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07 Nov 19:31

Colorado communities override state law limiting public broadband

by Jon Brodkin
firehose

all carriers suck forever, but muni sucks less

Colorado is one of 20 US states that impose limits on cities and towns seeking to build their own broadband networks. The Colorado restriction is less severe than ones in many other states, though. To offer Internet service, a city or town just has to pass a ballot question.

Seven counties and towns did just that during Tuesday's election, KUNC wrote:

As we reported earlier, the towns of Boulder, Cherry Hills Village, Red Cliff, Wray and Yuma were all seeking to override a 2005 state law that prohibits them from constructing or operating broadband or telecommunications infrastructure or services. That law, SB05-152 [.pdf], which was pushed by large telecommunications companies, can be overridden by a majority of voters.

Rio Blanco and Yuma Counties also had similar measures on the ballot that would have the effect of allowing those counties to get in the broadband game. All of these overrides passed handily, with margins of 70 percent or more in favor of giving authority to local governments to improve broadband access.

This doesn't guarantee that the communities will create broadband networks, but it gives them the right to do so whenever they're ready.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

07 Nov 19:31

EFF Hints At Lawsuit Against Verizon For Its Stealth Cookies

by timothy
firehose

all carriers suck forever

An anonymous reader writes A few weeks ago I noted how security researchers had discovered that Verizon has been injecting a unique new 'stealth cookie' identifier into all user traffic that tracks user online behavior, even if the consumer opts out. Using a unique Identifier Header, or UIDH, Verizon's ham-fisted system broadcasts your identity all across the web — and remains intact and open to third-party abuse — even if you opt-out of Verizon's behavioral ad programs. Now the Electronic Frontier Foundation has filed a complaint with the FCC and has strongly indicated that they're considering legal action against Verizon for violating consumer privacy laws.

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07 Nov 19:31

City that called Comcast “terrible” strikes deal for Comcast service

by Jon Brodkin
firehose

booo wooster booo
all carriers suck forever

You can check out any time you'd like, but you can never... well, you know the song.
Aurich Lawson

Comcast has won approval of its Time Warner Cable purchase in one of the cities that most vehemently objected to it.

Three weeks ago, the City Council in Worcester, MA voted 8-3 to urge the city manager to deny a transfer of the city's cable TV license from Charter to Comcast. Charter is involved in the Comcast/TWC merger through a series of customer swaps that are contingent on the main deal.

One Worcester councilor called Comcast "a terrible company" and said "they should not be welcome in this city."

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

07 Nov 19:29

littler

firehose

hmm

littler:

littler provides the r program, a simplified command-line interface for GNU R. This allows direct execution of commands, use in piping where the output of one program supplies the input of the next, as well as adding the ability for writing hash-bang scripts, i.e. creating executable files starting with, say, #!/usr/bin/r.

07 Nov 19:27

Comcast to issue discounts for days-long outage caused by bad update

by Jon Brodkin
firehose

all carriers suck forever

Even this DSL-loving turtle thought Comcast's service was too slow this week.
Comcast

Comcast attempted to update its X1 cable platform this week, but it ended up causing a lengthy outage for many customers. The company apologized yesterday and promised to issue credits to compensate customers for the time they weren't able to use their TV service. Customer reports suggest that Internet service went down as well.

"We know some of our customers may have missed their favorite shows off and on over the past few days and were unable to easily reach our customer care representatives for assistance… and we’re really sorry," Comcast Senior VP Charlie Herrin wrote. Herrin's new job is fixing Comcast's disappointing customer service. His announcement yesterday, titled, "Our mistake: making it right for customers," continues:

In the process of upgrading the X1 platform with new services and features, a technical issue arose that caused problems for our customers. We're working now to identify the customers who were impacted to personally apologize and proactively give them credits which we plan to have out to them within the next two weeks. This issue was our fault and we want to make it right.

So what happened? While we were deploying an upgrade to the X1 platform, we discovered an issue in the way the software that updates X1 was configured. We immediately stopped the deployment, and our engineers began working to identify the root cause and fix the issue.

While service has returned to normal for most X1 customers, our engineers are now going back over this issue and taking extra steps to prevent it from happening again. The fix we’ve put in place should be automatic—customers don’t need to do anything (such as rebooting or unplugging the box).

Thanks to our customers who have been patient with us, and to our employees who have been working around the clock on this.

Outages were reported in Philadelphia, Chicago, New York, and other cities. According to customer reports at DownDetector.com, more customers experienced Internet outages than TV outages, with 13 percent reporting a "total blackout." We've asked Comcast whether the faulty update also caused Internet outages but haven't received an answer yet.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

07 Nov 19:27

Woman Killed by Red Line Train at Downtown Crossing - Massachusetts news - Boston.com

by gguillotte
firehose

TW: suicide

I was at the Harvard Square station as this happened last night. There's photos of the lines for the shuttle buses that replaced trains between Harvard and Broadway. (I just took the 66 instead.)

A southbound Red Line train struck and killed a woman at Downtown Crossing station Thursday night.
07 Nov 19:27

Make A Two Player Bartop Arcade Machine #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

by Rebecca Houlihan
firehose

hottttttttt

NewImage

Make a two player bartop arcade machine. via instructables

The ‘Galactic Starcade’ is a DIY retro bartop arcade cabinet for two players. It is powered by the Raspberry Pi micro-computer and plays multiple types of retro games – primarily NES, SNES, Megadrive and arcade (MAME) games. Using a Pi keeps the cost, weight and complexity to a minimum but the cabinet could also house a more powerful PC-based system to play more modern games.

I’ve always wanted an arcade machine for authentic retro gaming but they take up a lot of space and cost a lot of money. Making a custom bartop cabinet like this one solves both of those problems. It also lets you play potentially thousands of games on a single machine. This project costs under £200 (approx. $320) to make, whereas a prebuilt custom cabinet can set you back four or five times that amount!

Full tutorial

998Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

07 Nov 19:26

Elite: Dangerous gets a release date: December 16

by Lee Hutchinson
firehose

hot damn! they're really doing it

The latest Elite: Dangerous newsletter was just released, and it leads off with the announcement that the space simulator has an official release date: December 16. That’s just 39 days away, and puts paid to Frontier Developments’ promises that the game would be out by the end of the year. The game can be preordered for $50, and eager would-be pilots can jump into the beta immediately for $75 (though only until November 22).

The December 16 release will be for the Windows version of the game; Mac users will have to wait until next year. Customers who buy the game will be able to download both the Windows and Mac versions (when available, obviously), and saved games will work on either platform—Windows users will be able to load their save state on a Mac or vice versa.

The fourth sequel to the 30-year old watershed space combat simulator Elite, the game came to the public’s attention in late 2012 when the developers launched a Kickstarter campaign to crowdfund the game’s completion. A playable alpha was made available to some Kickstarter backers over the summer of 2013—though access to the alpha could also be purchased after the Kickstarter closed. We dipped our toes into the game in June with the $150 "premium beta" (the beta access fee also included a copy of the released version and all future expansions), and have been in love with the game ever since.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

07 Nov 19:25

Twilight Saga: Late Afternoon

by nedroid
firehose

lol the title text

Twilight Saga: Late Afternoon

07 Nov 19:24

Obamacare Challenge Gets High Court Review, With Crucial Tax Credits at Stake - Bloomberg

by gguillotte
firehose

great

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to consider a challenge to the subsidies that are a linchpin of President Barack Obama’s health-care overhaul, accepting a case that suddenly puts the law under a new legal cloud. Two years after upholding much of the law by a single vote, the justices today said they will hear a Republican-backed appeal targeting tax credits that have helped more than 4 million people afford insurance.
07 Nov 19:24

Saved! Detroit Approved to Set Bankruptcy Plan in Action - NBC News.com

by gguillotte
The largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history is ending. Federal Judge Steven Rhodes on Friday confirmed Detroit’s plan to emerge from Chapter 9 bankruptcy, allowing the city to crawl out from under a $7 billion mountain of debt and setting it on a course to try to revive its financial fortunes.
07 Nov 19:22

Robotic Spacecraft Poster Series

firehose

via Jakkyn

07 Nov 19:22

Mulder?

firehose

no
via Jakkyn

07 Nov 18:30

Photo

firehose

via KV



















07 Nov 18:29

Navy SEAL who shot Osama bin Laden identified as Rob O'Neill - Yahoo News

by gguillotte
firehose

'Despite killing the world's most-wanted terrorist, he said, he was not given a pension, health care or protection for himself or his family. "[SEAL command] told me they could get me a job driving a beer truck in Milwaukee," he told Esquire. "My health care for me and my family stopped. I asked if there was some transition from my Tricare to Blue Cross Blue Shield. They said no. You're out of the service, your coverage is over. Thanks for your 16 years. Go f--- yourself." '

In 2013, Esquire published an extensive interview with O'Neill about his role in the raid but did not reveal his identity. In that interview, the former SEAL — identified as "The Shooter" due to what the magazine described as "safety" reasons — said he had been largely abandoned by the U.S. government since leaving the military. Despite killing the world's most-wanted terrorist, he said, he was not given a pension, health care or protection for himself or his family. "[SEAL command] told me they could get me a job driving a beer truck in Milwaukee," he told Esquire. "My health care for me and my family stopped. I asked if there was some transition from my Tricare to Blue Cross Blue Shield. They said no. You're out of the service, your coverage is over. Thanks for your 16 years. Go f--- yourself." "What are you supposed to do when you come out of the military after such service," Tom O'Neill said, "become a greeter at Walmart?" O'Neill was involved in two other missions that became Hollywood movies. In 2009, he was the lead jumper on the Maersk Alabama, the ship that was hijacked by Somali pirates. The rescue mission was later turned into the Oscar-winning movie "Captain Phillips." He was a member of the SEAL team that helped save fellow SEAL Marcus Luttrell, who survived a failed mission to capture a Taliban leader in Afghanistan. Luttrell's 2007 book, "Lone Survivor," was adapted for a 2013 film starring Mark Wahlberg.
07 Nov 18:27

smithsonianlibraries: Go home, The Electrical Experimenter, you...

firehose

smithsonianlibraries has a nice tumblr