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In this podcast episode, we talked with Tamara Atanasoska about building fair AI systems. About the Speaker: Tamara works on ML explainability, interpretability and fairness as Open Source Software Engineer at probable. She is a maintainer of fairlearn, contributor to scikit-learn and skops. Tamara has both computer science/ software engineering and a computational linguistics(NLP) background. During the event, the guest discussed their career journey from software engineering to open-source contributions, focusing on explainability in AI through Scikit-learn and Fairlearn. They explored fairness in AI, including challenges in credit loans, hiring, and decision-making, and emphasized the importance of tools, human judgment, and collaboration. The guest also shared their involvement with PyLadies and encouraged contributions to Fairlearn. 0:00 Introduction to the event and the community 1:51 Topic introduction: Linguistic fairness and socio-technical perspectives in AI 2:37 Guest introduction: Tamara's background and career 3:18 Tamara's career journey: Software engineering, music tech, and computational linguistics 9:53 Tamara's background in language and computer science 14:52 Exploring fairness in AI and its impact on society 21:20 Fairness in AI models 26:21 Automating fairness analysis in models 32:32 Balancing technical and domain expertise in decision-making 37:13 The role of humans in the loop for fairness 40:02 Joining Probable and working on open-source projects 46:20 Scopes library and its integration with Hugging Face 50:48 PyLadies and community involvement 55:41 The ethos of Scikit-learn and Fairlearn
Guest Batool Almarzouq Panelist Richard Littauer | Amanda Casari Show Notes In this episode, hosts Richard Littauer and Amanda Casari are joined by Batool Almarzouq, Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Liverpool and Research Project Manager at the Alan Turing Institute. They discuss Batool's work in open science, including her involvement in the Open Science Community Saudi Arabia, localization efforts, and the challenges of connecting global and local open science initiatives. The conversation covers Batool's efforts to make research more accessible and open in the Arab region, the concept of localization vs. translation, her experiences with translation management systems, and the importance of community and mentorship in advancing open science. Batool shares insights from her collaborations with various groups and the influence of Latin American communities on her work. Press download now to hear more! [00:02:11] Batool explains her roles at various institutions and how she promotes open science in Saudi Arabia and globally. [00:03:31] Batool discusses the difficulties Arab researchers face in engaging with open science, including language barriers and the Western focus of many initiatives. [00:04:50] Amanda asks about the vision for open science in Saudi Arabia and Batool talks about open science values in the Arab world and the cultural significance of knowledge sharing pre-colonization. [00:07:56] Batool talks about localization efforts and bridging the gap between Western and Arab scientific norms. [00:11:04] There's a discussion on how Batool connects researchers and community leaders in Arab countries, the grassroots nature of the Open Science Community Saudi Arabia, and the importance of local engagement. [00:14:20] Batool details the technical tools used for localization, challenges with translating right-to-left languages, and the importance of building open source tools for internationalization. [00:20:20] There's a conversation on the difficulties in securing funding for localization efforts and the importance of empowering local communities to take charge of their own knowledge production. [00:23:43] Batool shares insights on working with Latin American communities, shared challenges in open science, and the importance of community-led initiatives. [00:25:33] We hear Batool's thoughts on the importance of mentorship, community, and collective action in creating meaningful change. [00:27:51] Find out where you can follow Batool and her work online. Quotes [00:06:56] “One of the things is that science used to be more transdisciplinary.” [00:11:18] “We have our own full-time jobs, there's no system that we use in place recording or creating things. It's more about connecting people and creating that space for this discussion to grow.” [00:25:51] “There's two places I get a lot of value from outside of academia: engaging with community practice and finding mentors.” [00:27:17] “Finding people who relate to you, relate to your ideas, and also help you articulate them better and see what other people are trying to do gives you a lot of power.” Spotlight [00:28:27] Amanda's spotlight is PyLadies. [00:29:22] Richard's spotlight is American Atheists. [00:30:14] Batool's spotlight is Alycia Crall, Richie Moluno and Goodnews Sandy. Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) podcast@sustainoss.org (mailto:podcast@sustainoss.org) richard@sustainoss.org (mailto:richard@sustainoss.org) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Mastodon (https://mastodon.social/tags/sustainoss) Open Collective-SustainOSS (Contribute) (https://opencollective.com/sustainoss) Richard Littauer Socials (https://www.burntfen.com/2023-05-30/socials) Amanda Casari Linktree (https://linktr.ee/amcasari) Batool Almarzouq LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/batool-almarzouq-093366a1/) Batool Almarzouq Website (https://batool-almarzouq.netlify.app/) The Alan Turing Institute (https://www.turing.ac.uk/) The Turing Way (https://the-turing-way.netlify.app/index.html) Open Science Community Saudi Arabia (https://osc-ksa.com/) Open Science Community Saudi Arabia-Zenodo (https://zenodo.org/communities/1231231664/records?q=&l=list&p=1&s=10&sort=newest) Ramsey Nasser-GitHub (https://github.com/nasser/) Translation management system (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translation_management_system) Crowdin (https://crowdin.com/) JSQuarto (https://github.com/Open-Science-Community-Saudi-Arabia/JSquarto) PyLadies (https://pyladies.com/) American Atheists (https://www.atheists.org/) Alycia Crall (https://carpentries.org/blog/2021/07/introducing-the-carpentries-director-of-community/) Richie Moluno (https://realrichi3.github.io/) Goodnews Sandy (https://goodnewssandy.netlify.app/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Batool Almarzouq.
Guest Juliana Barros Lima Panelist Richard Littauer Show Notes In this episode of Sustain, Richard Littauer talks with Juliana (Jules) Barros Lima, a full-stack developer and marketing director at Associação Python Brasil. They explore Jules' involvement in organizing and supporting Python events across Brazil, including her work with PyLadies Recife and Python Brasil. The conversation dives into the challenges of fostering diversity and inclusion in open-source communities, touching on Jules' "atomic diversity" framework for engaging local, regional, and national groups. They also discuss the impact of the pandemic on the Python community, the importance of mentorship, and the role of diverse organizing teams in creating codes of conduct that are empathetic and effective. Jules emphasizes the significance of leadership development, community collaboration, and stepping out of comfort zones to strengthen open-source communities globally. Download now to hear more! [00:01:57] Jules gives an overview of the Associação Python Brasil, what they do, and the challenges of managing a large community. [00:03:39] Jules discusses recent events organized and supported by the association and mentions that Python Brasil 2024 will be held in Rio de Janeiro and expected to have at least 300-500 attendees. [00:04:49] Jules discusses the importance of recognizing different regions' unique cultural and economic situations within Brazil. [00:06:31] We learn about the importance of subgroups and identity-based communities like PyLadies, and Jules shares insights from a talk given at PyCon US about amplifying diversity within Python communities and introduces the concept of “atomic diversity.” [00:11:43] Jules highlights how the pandemic impacted Brazil's Python community and discusses efforts to rebuild the community through open source tools and events. [00:14:07] Richard asks about how Brazil's Python community fits within the larger global context and how Brazilian developers can bridge these gaps. Jules mentions that the community is still recovering and growing, the challenges with language barriers, and emphasizes the significance of maintaining open discussions and using GitHub. [00:17:12] Richard and Jules discuss the importance of having diverse organizing teams and codes of conduct (COCs). [00:23:03] Jules offers insights into the organizational challenges faced in building inclusive events and communities. One key takeaway is the importance of engaging and listening to minority groups, such as PyLadies and Rails Girls, and the need for mentorship to help build leadership within underrepresented communities. [00:26:52] Jules stresses that community work is about giving back to the people and organizations that helped individuals grow. [00:31:32] Jules shares strategies to foster new leadership by giving people manageable tasks and responsibilities to build confidence, engaging the community through social media, storytelling, and the need for cross-community collaboration. [00:36:00] Find out where you can follow Jules online. Spotlight [00:36:39] Richard's spotlight is ‘cat' Command. [00:37:08] Jules's spotlight is the project, Querido Diário (Dear Diary). Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) podcast@sustainoss.org (mailto:podcast@sustainoss.org) richard@sustainoss.org (mailto:richard@sustainoss.org) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Mastodon (https://mastodon.social/tags/sustainoss) Open Collective-SustainOSS (Contribute) (https://opencollective.com/sustainoss) Richard Littauer Socials (https://www.burntfen.com/2023-05-30/socials) Juliana (Jules) Barros Lima Website (https://bento.me/julesbrlm) Python Brasil 2024 (https://2024.pythonbrasil.org.br/) Associação Python Brasil (https://apyb.python.org.br/index.html) APyB (Python Brasil Association) (https://apyb.python.org.br/) APyB Tarefas (Tasks) (https://github.com/apyb/tarefas) APyB Comunidade (Discussions) (https://github.com/apyb/comunidade/discussions) PyLadies Recife (https://recife.pyladies.com/) PyLadies (https://pyladies.com/) Rails Girls (https://railsgirls.com/) Querido Diário (https://docs.queridodiario.ok.org.br/pt-br/latest/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Juliana Barros Lima.
Hear about Vicky's journey in the Python community and learn how she has been helping grow the Python and PyLadies community in Ireland!
Említett események, konferenciák, linkek: >> PyLadies: https://www.meetup.com/pyladies-budapest/ >> Women in Data Science Budapest, 2024: https://widsbudapest.com/ ---- Tomi Data Science-es Termékei: Data Science Klub: https://dataklub.hu Junior Data Scientist Akadémia: https://data36.com/junior-data-scientist-akademia/
Freelancing 29. Februar 2024, Jochen Ein ungewöhnlich hoher Anteil der Hosts dieses Podcasts
Welcome to Test Automation Experience! In this episode, Nikolay is joined by Paloma Oliveira, an open-source developer advocate with a rich history of promoting FOSS (Free and Open Source Software) and advocating for diversity and equity in tech spaces. Together, they explore the open source revolution, the critical aspects of disability and accessibility, and unveil strategies to skyrocket your development career. Subscribe now to Test Automation Experience and elevate your career in the world of tech!0:00 - Introduction1:20 - Most important tech lesson6:35 - How Paloma unintentionally got into open source10:05 - FOSS philosophy12:05 - Closed vs open-source20:05 - Critical disability26:05 - Designing with accessibility for all37:05 - Getting started in open source step-by-step40:45 - Projects and repos to skyrocket your career==============================CONNECT WITH PALOMA OLIVEIRA
Mariatta has been a contributor to Python for many years and is a very inspiring public speaker.Some of what we talk about:Python Documentation Working GroupGitHub bots, There's an API for thatPyLadiesPyLadiesConTypo of the Day (maintainerd, verbossity, work-lie balance, etc.)A fish aquariumCooking, BakingHistory of TempuraWorking with APIs with PythonPublic Speaking / Giving TalksThe power of seeing other women give talks The Complete pytest CourseLevel up your testing skills and save time during coding and maintenance.Check out courses.pythontest.com ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Equal IT | Co-founder | Equality in IT | Recruitment Services | DEI Partner | Interview Preparation | Entrepreneurship | Career Lessons | Reflection | Voices of Women | Representation | Women in Tech | STEM | Ellie King, the Co-Founder of Equal IT is joining us today. Ellie and her team are on a mission to support organizations worldwide in recruiting inclusive teams and building equitable cultures through their coaching and support services.At Equal IT, diversity, equity, and inclusion are not just buzzwords - they are the foundation of everything they do. Ellie and her team have cultivated a vibrant community and have collaborated with esteemed organizations such as Nordic Women in Tech Awards, Women in Tech Sweden, PyLadies, WomenWhoCode, and HackYourFuture.Ellie's passion for sharing inspiration shines through her role as the host of Equal IT's Equal Inspired Podcast. Through this platform, she amplifies the voices of women and non-dominant groups who are doing amazing work in the tech industry, creating relatable role models because representation truly matters.In today's episode, we have the privilege of diving into Ellie's entrepreneurial journey. We'll explore her insights on recruitment practices, the pressing need for increased representation across industries, and her perspective on career progression based on Equal IT's focused initiatives.Get ready to be inspired and gain valuable insights as we delve into a conversation filled with entrepreneurial wisdom, diversity advocacy, and the importance of equal opportunities. Follow Ellie on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellie-king-62842777/ Check out the Equal Inspired podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nh7D0wLe6sA&ab_channel=EqualIT-DE%26IisinourDNA
No mês de março, o LabeCast apresenta uma bancada totalmente feminina para discutir sobre as mulheres na tecnologia. Laís Jesus e Fay Miranda comentam quais são as oportunidades, os desafios e a importância de ter uma equipe diversa no mercado de trabalho de tecnologia. Referências do episódio: Desistir não é uma opção (Camila Farani) Estrelas além do amanhã Estrutura de dados e algoritmos com javascript (Loiane Groner) Elas Programa e Silvia Coelho = https://www.instagram.com/elasprogramam/ Rafa Ballerinni = https://www.youtube.com/user/RafaellaBallerini Attekita = https://www.instagram.com/attekitadev/ Lisiane = https://www.instagram.com/lisianelemos/ PyLadies = http://brasil.pyladies.com/
We talked about: Jessica's background Giving a talk at a tech conference about coffee Jessica's transition into tech (How to get started) Going from learning to actually making money Landing your first job in tech Does your age matter when you're trying to get a job? Challenges that Jessica faced in the beginning of her career Jessica's role at PyLadies Fighting the Imposter Syndrome Generational differences in digital literacy and how to improve it Events organized by PyLadies Jessica's beginnings at PyLadies (organizing events) Jessica's experience with public speaking The impact of public speaking on your career Tips for public speaking Jessica's work at Ecosia Discrimination in the tech industry (and in general) Finding Jessica online Links: Ecosia's website: https://www.ecosia.org/ Ecosia's blog: https://blog.ecosia.org/ecosia-financial-reports-tree-planting-receipts/ PyLadies Berlin: https://berlin.pyladies.com/ PyLadies' Meetup: https://meetup.com/PyLadies-Berlin Code Academy: https://www.codecademy.com/ Freecodecamp: https://www.freecodecamp.org/ Coursera Machine Learning: https://www.coursera.org/learn/machine-learning ML Bookcamp code: https://github.com/alexeygrigorev/mlbookcamp-code/tree/master/course-zoomcamp Google Summer code: https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com/ Outreachy website: https://www.outreachy.org/ Alumni Interview: https://railsgirlssummerofcode.org/blog/2020-03-17-alumni-interview-jessica Python pizza: https://python.pizza/ Pycon: https://pycon.it/en Pycon 2022: https://2022.pycon.de/ Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html
Silvia Ariza, Data Scientist, nos cuenta cómo ha sido su experiencia en tecnología y cómo la brecha de género en el sector va disminuyendo pero aún resta trabajo por realizar. Twitter @silari_ Tocamos: Los pilares para llegar a ser data scientist. Aprendizaje con casos prácticos y estructura de storytelling. Posible ruta para conseguir un rol como data scientist. Qué son los roles como data engineer y data scientist. R y Python. Librerías de visualización y su relevancia. Utilizar bancos de datos abiertos para aprender. Las redes sociales de los programadores (GitHub y Stack Overflow) Empoderarnos como científicos de datos. Transmitir lo que hemos hecho. Ser la cara del análisis antes y después. Twitter para ingresar a nichos de información. Rompiendo la brecha de género al elegir qué carrera estudiar. Comunidades: la nueva fuerza del empoderamiento profesional (Women in Data Science, PyLadies, RLadies, CoWomen) Comunidades: Women in Data Science CoWomen PyLadies Producido por ELIA - Escuela Latinoamericana de Inteligencia Artificial: ELIA (@elia_latam) Omar Espejel (@espejelomar) Estefanía Arias (@yharyarias5) Yeder Laura (@yederlvicente)
Ana Cecília é entusiasta de comunidades autogestionadas como caminho para mudanças. Gestora do Portal de Dados Abertos da UFPE, embaixadora para inovação cívica da Open Knowledge Brasil e da Women in Data Science Recife. Membra da PyLadies Recife e do Conselho Global PyLadies. Amante de gatinhas e gifs. Redes Sociais: https://www.instagram.com/pyladiesrecife/ https://twitter.com/pyladies_recife https://twitter.com/okfnbr Outras observações: Links: http://brasil.pyladies.com/2014/09/19/primeiro-encontro-recife/
Débora Azevedo é professora de Inglês na rede pública de ensino do Rio Grande do Norte. Tem formação mista em Letras - Inglês, técnica em informática e redes de computadores e atualmente mestranda em Inovação com Tecnologias Educacionais, com um projeto de desenvolvimento de software educativo para a alfabetização bilíngue de crianças surdas e bacharelanda em TI. Está envolvida com a comunidade Python desde 2014 com PyLadies, grupos de tradução e hoje é membra do conselho da diretoria da Python Software Foundation. Links: Redes Sociais: @pydebb no Twitter Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/debora-azevedo-1919b996/ Outros links: http://amiarealdeveloper.com/
Melissa Weber Mendonça é uma matemática e desenvolvedora de software que vive em Florianópolis. Ela trabalha na Quansight e dedica seu tempo ao NumPy e outros projetos open source. Assista em https://youtu.be/tgAtyWyQhjs Melissa fez bacharelado em Matemática e Computação Científica na Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Mestrado em Matemática pela mesma universidade e Doutorado Mestre em Matemática Aplicada pela Facultés Universitaires Notre Dame de la Paix, em Namur (Bélgica). Depois do doutorado, ela passou 9 anos como professora na Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. Links: NumPy https://numpy.org/, PyLadies https://brasil.pyladies.com/, Data Umbrella https://www.dataumbrella.org/, Women in Machine Learning and Data Science http://wimlds.org/. Marlon Pinheiro, Desenvolvedor de Software e Mestrando em Engenharia de Software na UTFPR, foi o nosso podcaster por um dia. Indicação: livro de Bell Hooks: Ensinando a Transgredir https://www.amazon.com/Ensinando-Transgredir-Educa%C3%A7%C3%A3o-Pr%C3%A1tica-Liberdade/dp/8546901406 Links: Página: https://melissawm.github.io/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/melissawm LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/axequalsb/ GitHub: https://github.com/melissawm Página antiga: http://mtm.ufsc.br/~melissa/ Os entrevistadores deste episódio foram Adolfo Neto e Maria Claudia Emer. A abertura do episódio foi feita por Kathleen Danielly Souza Lins. O Emílias Podcast é um projeto de extensão da UTFPR Curitiba. Descubra tudo sobre o programa Emílas - Armação em Bits em https://linktr.ee/Emilias.
No episódio de hoje trazemos como convidada Lis Barreto, co-fundadora do PyLadies Sergipe, estagiária na área de Dados da XP Inc. e graduanda em Engenharia de Computação na UFS. Entusiasta da Diversidade & Inclusão na Tecnologia. É apaixonada por cultura Sci-Fi e café, amante do universo Open Source. Quer conhecer mais sobre a Lis? Então aperta o play! Redes Sociais da Lis: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/lis-r-barreto | GitHub: github.com/lis-r-barreto | Instagram: @lis_barreto.py Redes Sociais da Pyladies Sergipe: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pyladies-sergipe/ | GitHub: https://github.com/pyladies-sergipe | Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pyladiessergipe/ | Twitter: https://twitter.com/pyladiessergipe Link da palestra “Equidade, Diversidade e Inclusão nas Comunidades de Tecnologia” na Twitch da PyladiesThe https://www.twitch.tv/videos/965779279
No episódio de hoje trazemos como convidada a Emily Horta, estudante de Sistemas de Informação e Co-fundadora da Pyladies Parnaíba. Saiba mais sobre sua trajetória e a comunidade que lidera apertando o play neste episódio! Redes sociais da Emily: Instagram: @emillyhortapy Redes Pyladies Parnaíba: site oficial Pyladies Parnaíba: https://parnaibapyladies.github.io/ Instagram: @pyladiesphb
Você conhece a PyLadies Teresina? E quem está por trás dessa iniciativa? Vem saber isso e muito mais no bate-papo com a Ana Maria, cofundadora dessa comunidade de Python que busca empoderar mulheres na área de tecnologia do Piauí. Organizadora do PyLadies Teresina desde 2016, atualmente é estudante de Desenvolvimento de Sistemas. Militante Feminista e coordenadora do Núcleo Marielle Franco. Redes sociais Pyladies The: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pyladiesthe/ Twitter: pyladiesthe site oficial pyladies the: https://pyladiesteresina.github.io/
Leticia took us from her job in oceanography to her current software engineering role at Stripe. She described how Python changed her life, or to be more accurate, how the Brasilian Python community changed her life. We talked about learning, sharing, writing, and knowing yourself. We talked about mentorship and helping others. What a story!Here are the links from the show:Leticia on Twitter https://www.twitter.com/leleportellaLeticia's Homepage https://leportella.comCreditsCover Campfire Rounds by Blue Dot Sessions is licensed CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.Your host is Timothée (Tim) Bourguignon, more about him at timbourguignon.fr.Gift the podcast a rating on one of the major platforms https://devjourney.info/subscribeSupport the podcast, support us on Patreon: https://bit.ly/devjpatreonSupport the show (http://bit.ly/2yBfySB)
Quer saber o que você tem a ver com o tema Diversidade? Sem dúvida esse é um tópico que tem sido cada vez mais discutido no ambiente de negócios. Nesse episódio, a aluna do curso de Administração da Universidade de Brasília Clara Brant entrevista a Daniela Estevam que é Administradora, Embaixadora da Rede Mulher Empreendedora - RME , Membro das Pyladies e do Calango Hacker Clube, Multiplicadora do Programa Ela Pode, Consultora, Mentora de Hackathons e maratonas e Palestrante. A Daniela participou recentemente de um talk promovido pelo comitê de diversidade da AD&M Consultoria (Empresa Júnior do curso de Administração da UnB) em parceria com o Instituto Gloria e, por isso tivemos também a participação especial de Ruan Vitório - Diretor de Gestão, Rafael Sales - Diretor de Inovação, Luana de Paula - Coordenadora de Conexão da AD&M, que são também alunos do curso de Administração da UnB e que nos contam um pouco sobre o seu processo seletivo e a importância da diversidade. Vem com a gente! Saiba mais sobre o tema no Instagram @checkinadem - https://instagram.com/checkinadem?igshid=16d1963jl1q8w Sobre o processo seletivo da AD&M: https://processoseletivoadem.solides.jobs/ Quer conhecer mais sobre a AD&M Consultoria? Acesse o site: www.admconsultoria.com.br Siga a @ademconsultoria no Instagram
O que é jornalismo de dados? Como é a transição do jornalismo para a Ciência de Dados? Qual o papel das agências de fact checking? Judite Cypreste é jornalista de dados e desenvolvedora. Já trabalhou nessa área na Folha de São Paulo, no Aos Fatos e agora é produtora de reportagem na Globo News, com foco em dados. Além disso, é co-fundadora e diretora do Colaboradados, apresenta o Coluna7, o podcast brasileiro sobre jornalismo de dados, e atua também na Associação Python Brasil como Conselheira e no grupo PyLadies.Judite Cypreste: https://judite.dev/Colaboradados: https://colaboradados.com.br/Pyladies: https://brasil.pyladies.com/Podcast Coluna7: https://colaboradados.com.br/podcast.htmlApresentação: Leonardo MonasterioEdição: Nelson Galvão e Felipe Mux
Sadie is helping pave the way for women in data science as being the first female instructor for Data Science on the Coursera platform, and as founder and CEO of Women in Data - a non-profit organization focused on increasing diversity in data careers. FIND SADIE ONLINE Website: http://sadiestlawrence.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sadiestlawrence/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sadiestlawrence Twitter: https://twitter.com/sadiestlawrence QUOTES [18:59] "If you're looking to get into Data science and transitioning from something else, what made you successful in that area and what principles did you apply?" [20:41] "I knew that if I was going to do Data science, I needed a community and a tribe of people to be a part of." [22:54] "Data science isn't just about building models and doing that type of work. You're working, usually for, a business..." [34:18] "If you want to own your career, really what you need to do is look at and see what things can I control in my life. And when you start hundred percent focusing on those the world around you is going to change." SHOW NOTES [00:00:40] Guest introduction [00:03:19] Sadie's path to data science [00:05:52] Data collection in laboratory settings [00:07:32] The data science hype [00:08:24] Is data science going away any time soon? [00:09:39] The positive impact data science will have [00:11:34] Going from good to great as a data scientist [00:14:02] SQL skills you need for data science [00:17:23] An action plan for breaking into data science [00:22:02] Soft skills to elevate your career [00:23:19] Use verbal judo to be more persuasive [00:24:46] How to communicate with executives [00:25:55] The data science mindset [00:27:35] Making the most of networking events [00:29:24] Communication and teamwork [00:30:49] Is data science an art or science? [00:32:55] How to own your career [00:36:38] Steps for combating imposter syndrome? [00:38:17] Tips for women in data science [00:43:45] What can the Data community do to help foster the inclusion of women in the field? [00:45:31] What's the one thing you want people to learn from your story? [00:46:43] Lightning round Special Guest: Sadie St. Lawrence.
Mária Solárová je mladá developerka so skúsenosťami zo softvérového vývoja aj biznis developmentu. Pracovala v londýnskom aj americkom Googli, po príchode späť na Slovensko jej učarovali roboty vo firme Photoneo. V IT ju najviac baví prepájať technické znalosti s mäkkými zručnosťami, čo sa snaží odovzdávať aj vo svojich vzdelávacích aktivitách. Už niekoľko rokov sa venuje vedeniu ženských komunít v programoch ako PyLadies, Django Girls a Code First Girls. A práve o nich bude naša najbližšia diskusia. V rozhovore s Máriou sa dozviete: -prečo sa oplatí dať šancu IT a programovaniu, -čo zvládne naprogramovať každá z nás, -kde sa môžete spoločne učiť programovať, -ako sa dajú získané zručnosti zúročiť v praxi, -čo sa v ženských IT komunitách naučila ona. Diskusiu moderuje Mirka Uhnak, CEO Mini Tech MBA for Women.
La invitada de hoy, Mercedes Wyss, me acompaña primero para hablar de ¿porqué está involucrada en muchas comunidades? Algunas de ellas son: Devs+502, JDuchess Guatemala, PyLadies, Women in Data... Y el tema de este EspacioAbierto es computación cuántica sin miedo, bueno con un poquito de miedo. Empezaremos desde preguntar ¿porqué nos debe importar?, ¿qué es? y ¿cuál será el futuro de la computación cuántica a 30 años?
Conversamos com Juliany Raiol, Embaixadora de Inovação Cívica da Open Knowledge Brasil. Ela é "pós-graduanda em Ciência de Dados pela Universidade do Estado do Amazonas (UEA) e bacharela em Sistemas de Informação pela mesma instituição. Atualmente trabalha como Desenvolvedora Backend no Instituto Triad. Além de ser organizadora do PyLadies e do PyData Manaus, também é uma das Embaixadoras de Inovação Cívica da Open Knowledge Brasil. Adora compartilhar o que aprende e nutre um amor intenso pela área de computação. " (texto fornecido pela própria Juliany) Este episódio foi gravado com transmissão ao vivo no YouTube e a gravação está em https://youtu.be/i_b9sbtH97Y. Links da Juliany: Twitter https://twitter.com/julianyraiol Site pessoal http://julianyraiol.github.io/ Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/julianyraiol/ Github https://github.com/julianyraiol Instagram https://instagram.com/julianyraiol Lattes: http://lattes.cnpq.br/1801438836189718 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/julianyraiool Organizações da qual Juliany faz parte: Open Knowledge Brasil https://www.ok.org.br/ PyLadies Manaus https://github.com/pyladiesmanaus PyData Manaus https://github.com/pydatamanaus Episódios mencionados: - Elloá Guedes https://anchor.fm/emilias-podcast/episodes/Ello-Guedes-Professora-e-Entusiasta-Python-eealu9/a-a28esd4 - Letícia Silva https://anchor.fm/emilias-podcast/episodes/Letcia-Silva-Head-de-Cincia-de-Dados-na-2MI-parte-1-ed4i23 Outros grupos de mulheres dos quais JUliany participa: - Cunhatã DIgital http://meninas.sbc.org.br/portfolio/cunhanta-digital/ - Women TechMakers https://www.womentechmakers.com/ Indicações da Juliany: - Persépolis (quadrinhos) https://www.amazon.com.br/Pers%C3%A9polis-Completo-Marjane-Satrapi/dp/8535911626 https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/991197.The_Complete_Persepolis - Persépolis (filme) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0808417/ - Livro Data Science do Zero https://www.amazon.com.br/dp/B07Y3ZQQGZ/ - Podcast AmarElo Prisma de Emicida https://open.spotify.com/show/0xfztI0qN9g4CuTpgcq5WS Os hosts deste episódio foram Adolfo Neto e Maria Claudia Emer. A abertura foi feita por Gabriela Morikawa e o final por Nayara Souza. Todos os links para o Emílias estão em https://linktr.ee/emilias. Siga-nos em nossas redes!
Suzan Barreto e Marcelo Toledo, dois feras de Tecnologia, conversaram sobre os desafios de se conquistar a equidade de gênero nos cargos desse mercado. Com mais de 20 anos de experiência cada, eles construíram suas carreiras em empresas de diferentes tamanhos e realidades, e puderam nesse bate papo nos provocar a pensar sobre a riqueza da diversidade nas relações e nos negócios. A chave para esse equilíbrio está na capacitação técnica e comportamental das candidatas às vagas universitárias e de trabalho. Segundo nossos convidados, levar informação, conhecimento, treinamentos e visão de oportunidades às mulheres lá no início de suas carreiras, tem sido a estratégia de muitas empresas e instituições que acreditam nos times diversos e multi-competentes. Projetos e iniciativas inclusivas citadas no episódio: PyLadies: http://brasil.pyladies.com Emíli@s – Armação em Bits: http://emilias.dainf.ct.utfpr.edu.br Meninas Digitais: http://meninas.sbc.org.br Minas Programam: https://minasprogramam.com Maria Lab: https://www.marialab.org Django Girls: https://djangogirls.org Rails Girls: http://railsgirls.com.br ReProgama: https://reprograma.com.br + Assista o episódio completo no nosso canal no YouTube: https://youtu.be/9Ep1zjDyFpk + Links do nosso convidado: Livia Pacheco Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mamaevirtual Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/MamaeVirtual Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/liviao.pacheco Blog: http://mamaevirtual.com/ + E se você gostou do nosso bate papo, inscreva-se no Canal e mantenha-se positivamente atualizado Pra conhecer mais sobre a Convertti e como a gente pode trabalhar juntos, acesse nosso site e nos visite nas redes sociais: Site: http://www.convertti.com.br Instagram: http://instagram.com/convertti_rh Facebook: http://facebook.com.br/converttirh Linkedin: http://linkedin.com/ConverttiConsultoria Comercial: elizabeth@convertti.com.br Andresa Grimas: andresa@convertti.com.br Adriana Praia: adriana@convertti.com.br Direção e Produção: Ricardo Scappini Site: https://www.ricardoscappini.com Instagram: http://instagram.com/scappini LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ricardoscappini
PyChat PyBay impressions PyCon India extended their CfP until TODAY! Nominate a PSF fellow! Deadline is TOMORROW! Django 3.1 release notes - backwards incompatibilities 3.0 earlier. Consortium for Python Data API Standards - from these peeps PyLadies section PyLadies India & WomanTechmakers hosting a Show&Tell on Aug 29th! Participation form PyLadies Munich hosting Naomi Ceder on Aug 27th talking about Python Objects Mid Meet - Hall of Fame Nina Zakharenko - PSF Director Follow Nina on Twitter Follow Nina on Twitch PyPI highlights AI Fairness 360 (aif360) CherryPy
#S02Ep19 - Provavelmente já estamos acostumadas ao cenário da tecnologia sendo usada para monitorar e vigiar, mas e a tecnologia ajudando a ressocializar? Nessa conversa deliciosa com Anicely Santos, falamos sobre suas pesquisas sobre tecnologia e o sistema prisional, suas experiências no ensino técnico e gradução e sua participação em comunidades como o Pyladies e o Afropython. Não esquece da dar aquela força compartilhando esse episódio usando as hashtags #SomosCintia e #MulheresPodcasters Referências citadas nesse episódio: Use a Cabeça Python - https://bit.ly/3fdzO0r PyLadies Recife - https://www.instagram.com/pyladiesrecife/ AfroPython - https://www.instagram.com/afropythonrecife/ Presos que menstruam - https://www.record.com.br/produto/presos-que-menstruam/ Angela Davis - https://www.geledes.org.br/angela-davis-2/ Projeto Mãe Coruja - https://maecoruja.pe.gov.br/ Toni Morrison - https://youtu.be/1Ueg4bsO1cs Inspirada na computação - https://www.instagram.com/inspiradanacomputacao/ Dicas Empoderadas: Mustic Live #1 - Sobre o Futuro dos Espetáculos - https://youtu.be/iM2UC_ENXIE Gilberto Gil | #FiqueEmCasa e cante #Comigo - https://youtu.be/s6KB4dDmrcw Comunidades, Algoritmos e Ativismos Digitais: Olhares Afrodiaspóricos - https://www.academia.edu/42254259/Comunidades_Algoritmos_e_Ativismos_-_olhares_afrodiasporicos Nina da Hora - https://twitter.com/ninadhora Black List - https://youtu.be/IKtL4IW6G0I Dark - https://youtu.be/JkUWmxhtU4E Mr.Robot - https://youtu.be/8qZYW_1hj2g
Melissa Lewis is a data reporter for Reveal, a Python teacher, the organizer of PyLadies Portland and the Portland chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association. Melissa is here to share her work as a data journalist who uses Python on the job. By the end you'll understand: What is data journalism? Why are Python and SQL great languages for data journalism? What skills does a data journalist need? Who is doing some of the best data journalism these days? Episode Show Notes and Full Transcript The Learn to Code Podcast is available on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, and YouTube. Follow One Month on Facebook and Twitter.
Manning Publications (https://www.manning.com/) has been kind enough to give our listeners a discount code. They're giving listeners of the show a permanent 40% discount, which is good for all products in all formats for everyone. Again, this is a PERMANENT discount code for all Greater Than Code listeners. Use the code PODGREAT20 every time you shop Manning. 02:30 - Emily’s Superpower: Finding all the dogs to pet. 05:05 - Emily’s Data Science Journey * Organization Behavior * Qualitative / Quantitative * Research: Women in STEM Fields 08:21 - The Idea of Passion * Unlocking the Clubhouse: Women in Computing (https://www.amazon.com/Unlocking-Clubhouse-Women-Computing-Press/dp/0262632691) * Gatekeeping 10:46 - Defining Data Science * Analytics * Decision Science * Machine Learning 13:48 - Emily’s Book: Build a Career in Data Science (https://www.manning.com/books/build-a-career-in-data-science?query=Emily%20Robinson) 16:11 - Dealing with Failure * PyData Ann Arbor: Jacqueline Nolis | When Data Science Projects Fail (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FW2dqQksRwo) 18:30 - Sponsorship * Emily’s Post on Sponsorship: The Importance of Sponsorship (https://hookedondata.org/the-importance-of-sponsorship/) 20:08 - The Spread of Data Science Roles * Strengthening Job-Critical Skills * The Art of Statistics (https://www.amazon.com/Art-Statistics-Learning-Pelican-Books/dp/0241398630/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=The+Art+of+Statistics&qid=1586796001&s=books&sr=1-2) * How Charts Lie (https://www.amazon.com/How-Charts-Lie-Getting-Information-ebook/dp/B07P88R6DW/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=How+Charts+Lie&qid=1586795985&s=books&sr=1-1) * The Cartoon Guide to Statistics (https://www.amazon.com/Cartoon-Guide-Statistics-Larry-Gonick/dp/0062731025) * Statistical Rethinking (https://www.amazon.com/Statistical-Rethinking-Bayesian-Examples-Chapman/dp/1482253445/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Statistical+Rethinking&qid=1586804227&s=books&sr=1-1) * The Book of Why (https://www.amazon.com/Book-Why-Science-Cause-Effect/dp/B07CYJ4G2L/ref=sr_1_1?crid=S9D75K7C9UAB&dchild=1&keywords=the+book+of+why&qid=1586804292&s=books&sprefix=The+book+of+why%2Cstripbooks%2C217&sr=1-1) 27:09 - Sponsorship (Cont’d) * Sponsorship vs Mentorship * Having a Solid Community / Network * R-Ladies (https://rladies.org/) * Capital * Smaller Acts of Mentorship * Trey Causey's Do you have time for a quick chat? Post (https://medium.com/@treycausey/do-you-have-time-for-a-quick-chat-c3f7e46de89d) * Sponsorship and Mentorship Work Best When There's a Concrete, Stated Goal * Data Helpers (https://www.datahelpers.org/) * Mentorship Should Be Part of Our Formal Career Ladder 36:20 - Themes Learned From Writing Build a Career in Data Science (https://www.manning.com/books/build-a-career-in-data-science?query=Emily%20Robinson) * Communication Skills * Proactivity * Community (Network is Important) 40:02 - Companies Should Train People to be Mentors * What does a tech lead do? (https://www.bitlog.com/2017/10/12/what-does-a-tech-lead-do/) 43:07 - Measuring Productivity * Thinking Fast and Slow (https://www.amazon.com/Thinking-Fast-Slow-Daniel-Kahneman/dp/0374533555) * How to Measure Anything (https://www.amazon.com/How-Measure-Anything-Intangibles-Business-ebook/dp/B00INUYS2U/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=How+to+Measure+Anything&qid=1586805526&s=books&sr=1-1) * The Tyranny of Metrics (https://www.amazon.com/Tyranny-Metrics-Jerry-Z-Muller-ebook/dp/B07K458MZG/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=The+Tyranny+of+Metrics&qid=1586805544&s=books&sr=1-1) * Engineering Career Development at Etsy (https://codeascraft.com/2019/10/02/engineering-career-development-at-etsy/) 45:48 - External vs Internal Data Science * People Scientists 47:18 - Women and Diverse Representation in Data Science * Groups & Resources * AI Inclusive (https://www.ai-inclusive.org/) * PyLadies (https://www.pyladies.com/) * Data Umbrella: NYC URGs and Allies in Data Science (https://www.meetup.com/nyc-data-umbrella/) * Black in AI (https://blackinai.github.io/) * Harvey Mudd (https://www.hmc.edu/) * Rice University (https://www.rice.edu/) * Why Women Are Flourishing In R Community But Lagging In Python (https://reshamas.github.io/why-women-are-flourishing-in-r-community-but-lagging-in-python/) Reflections: Avdi: Mentorship does not have to be a huge commitment to be useful and sponsorship is often as important -- or more important than mentorship. Chanté: What are the things that we’re willing to do for people who need an extra boost or push or support? Jacob: Mentorship is possible without the mentors knowing they’re even doing it. Rein: If you’re a mentor and your mentees aren’t coming to you with well-formed questions, it’s your job to coach them into that as a mentor. Emily: There aren’t enough resources for senior engineers on the non-technical side of things. This episode was brought to you by @therubyrep (https://twitter.com/therubyrep) of DevReps, LLC (http://www.devreps.com/). To pledge your support and to join our awesome Slack community, visit patreon.com/greaterthancode (https://www.patreon.com/greaterthancode) To make a one-time donation so that we can continue to bring you more content and transcripts like this, please do so at paypal.me/devreps (https://www.paypal.me/devreps). You will also get an invitation to our Slack community this way as well. Special Guest: Emily Robinson.
A última Pesquisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicílio do IBGE de 2019 demonstrou que apenas 20% dos profissionais que atuam no mercado de TI são mulheres. E a raiz do problema não está atrelada ao grau de educação, pois as mulheres de TI têm mais diplomas e capacitações do que o homens do setor no Brasil, e ainda assim, ganham 34% menos do que eles. Neste episódio falamos da necessidade de se falar sobre gênero dentro dos espaços tecnológicos e como o feminismo pode se apropriar dessas ferramentas para construir mais igualdade e enfrentar violências. Nossas Convidadas Cristina Castro - Embaixadora do Women Empowerment (WeAmericas), embaixadora do WEDO Brazil. Dani Estevam - Empreendedora, representante da PyLadies. Caleidoscópio Site e Instagram da Gloria Cris Castro no Twitter e Instagram Journal Brasil MIT As bruxas da noite Livro Misbehaving Documentário Privacidade Hackeada Documentário Safe cities for women Pyladiesdf no Instagram Dani Estevam no Instagram Empodera Donnas no Instagram Florin Empreendedorismo no Instagram Nosso agradecimento especial aos padrinhos e madrinhas: Alice dos Santos Silva, Aristoteles Homero dos Santos Cardona Junior, Barbara Miranda, Beatriz Sabô, Carolina da Silva Herrera, Denise Cortês Dantas, Diego Lemos de Resende, Elisa Costa Cruz, Fabris Martins, Geovane Monteiro Pedrosa, Giulia Losnak, Gleyce Marcia Prazeres, Izabel Lima, Jean Carlos Oliveira Santos, Julia Yoshino, Ligia Lila, Marcia Costa, Paloma Silva Galvão, Rafael Cavalcanti, Renata de França Lima, Rodrigo Candido Azevedo e Tássia Gimenes. Apoie o Olhares em: padrim.com.br/olhares Saiba mais sobre o Olhares em: olharespodcast.com.br Música utilizada na abertura do Episódio: I dunno by grapes (c) copyright 2008 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. Ft: J Lang, Morusque
That Tech Girl is a new podcast series by Dikshita Desai where she introduces her audience to the latest trends in technology, reviews products, books, online courses and discuses tech with experts in the field. This series also covers topics related to developer lifestyles, entrepreneurship, tech communities, and developer problems. Dikshita is the GDG lead and WTM ambassador for the state of Goa, India. She also leads WiMLDS, WiDS, Pyladies and Women Who Go in Goa. Moreover, she is a woman who is always in support of the developers and hosts regular tech events for the state.
Se liguem só, mais uma vez falando sobre linguagens de programação e a escolhida da vez foi uma bem querida: o Python. Para falar desta que é uma das linguagens de programação mais democráticas e até mais amadas que existem, tivemos além dos membros deste que é o podcast mais querido pela podosfera, uma convidada especial, a Nana (@nanaraythz) que vocês conhecerão melhor no episódio. Houve uma colaboração interessante para que vocês conheçam um pouco mais sobre essa, que é a linguagem de programação mais organizada do planeta, ta ligado? Então assim, dêem aquele play que o episódio ficou pesadão! Participantes: Junior Pereira Kaio Teixeira Miguel Sorares Nana Raythz Reginaldo Junior Links: PyJobs - https://www.pyjobs.com.br/ Github Eht-imaging - https://github.com/achael/eht-imaging/ Serenata de Amor - https://serenata.ai/ Python para Desenvolvedores - https://ark4n.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/python_para_desenvolvedores_2ed.pdf AfroPython - https://afropython.org/ AfroPython - https://afropython.org/ PyLadies - http://brasil.pyladies.com/ Python Brasil - https://python.org.br/ Tech && Beer - https://twitter.com/TechBeerPoA Django Girls - https://djangogirls.org/ Musicas: Parliament - P-Funk (Wants To Get Funked Up) Parteum - O Circulo Black Alien - Capitulo Zero Eddie Hazel - Physical Love George Clinton - Knee Deep Deep As A Mutha Funker
This week, Hugo speaks with Reshama Shaikh, about women in machine learning and data science, inclusivity and diversity more generally and how being intentional in what you do is essential. Reshama, a freelance data scientist and statistician, is also an organizer of the meetup groups Women in Machine Learning & Data Science (otherwise known as WiMLDS) and PyLadies. She has organized WiMLDS for 4 years and is a Board Member. They’ll discuss her work at WiMLDS and what you can do to support and promote women and gender minorities in data science. They’ll also delve into why women are flourishing in the R community but lagging in Python and discuss more generally how NUMFOCUS thinks about diversity and inclusion, including their code of conduct. All this and more.LINKS FROM THE SHOWDATAFRAMED GUEST SUGGESTIONSDataFramed Guest Suggestions (who do you want to hear on DataFramed?)FROM THE INTERVIEWReshama’s BlogReshama on TwitterList of Relevant Conferences (and Code of Conduct info)NYC PyLadies meetupCode of Conduct for NeurIPS and Other Stem OrganizationsNumFOCUS Diversity & Inclusion in Scientific Computing (DISC)NumFOCUS DISCOVER Cookbook (for inclusive events)fastai deep learning notesWiMLDS (Women in Machine Learning and Data Science)NYC WiMLDS meetupTo start a WiMLDS chapter: email info@wimlds.org and more info at our starter kit.WiMLDS WebsiteGlobal List of WiMLDS Meetup ChaptersWiMLDS Paris: They run their meetups in English, so knowledge of French is not required. FROM THE SEGMENTSDataCamp User Stories (with David Sudolsky ~17:27 & ~31:50)Boldr WebsiteOriginal music and sounds by The Sticks.
Katharine Jarmul is co-founder of KIProtect, a data security and privacy company for data science workflows in Berlin. She's been using Python since 2008 to solve and create problems. She helped form the first PyLadies chapter in Los Angeles in 2010, and co-authored an O'Reilly book along with several video courses on Python and data. She enjoys following the latest developments in machine learning, natural language processing, data privacy and ethics and workflow automation infrastructure. Together we first talked about her journey from journalism to software development. We then drifted toward her mentor and her willingness to give back to the communities. We spoke about diversity and finally tackled the topic of security and privacy.Here are the links of the show:https://twitter.com/kjam https://de.linkedin.com/in/katharinejarmulhttp://kjamistan.comhttps://kiprotect.comhttp://www.pyladies.comhttps://pydata.org/berlin2018http://heartofcode.orghttps://www.thestrangeloop.comhttps://www.swisscyberstorm.comhttps://gotober.comCreditsMusic Something Elated by Broke For Free (CC BY 3.0)Your hostSoftware Developer‘s Journey is hosted and produced by Timothée (Tim) Bourguignon, a crazy frenchman living in Germany who dedicated his life to helping others learn & grow. More about him at timbourguignon.fr.Want to be next?Do you know anyone who should be on the podcast? Do you want to be next? Drop me a line: info@devjourney.info or via Twitter @timothep.Gift the podcast a ratingPlease do me and your fellow listeners a favor by spreading the good word about this podcast. And please leave a rating (excellent of course) on the major podcasting platforms, this is the best way to increase the visibility of the podcast:Itunes - https://apple.co/2DWk5CWStitcher - http://bit.ly/2U7G931GoogleMusic - http://bit.ly/2ALx8E0Spotify - https://spoti.fi/2BLtV9pThanks!Support the show (http://bit.ly/2yBfySB)
Saudações Bughunters! Nesse episódio falamos um pouco sobre um assunto bastante importante: Mulheres no mercado de TI! Contamos neste cast com duas convidadas incríveis e com bastante experiência para dar os seus pontos de vista, expor informações, e muito mais sobre o tema! Links relacionados: Rails Girls: http://railsgirls.com/ QA Ladies: http://www.qaladies.com/ PYLadies: http://brasil.pyladies.com/ Girls in Tech: https://brazil.girlsintech.org/ Linkedin: Mari: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mariana-elisa-moises/ Iná: https://www.linkedin.com/in/inaray-santos/ João (D. Pedro): https://www.linkedin.com/in/joaolfc/ Lucas: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lucas-santos-ctfl-ctfl-at-ctal-ta-5630578a/
Thadeu Luz from Hand Talk shares with Melanie and Mark how the free Hand Talk education application translates and interprets spoken and written Portuguese into Brazilian Sign Language (aka LIBRAS or BSL). The application uses an animated avatar Hugo to deliver the signs through gestures and facial expressions and its built off of a statistical machine translation system and Firebase. Future plans include expanding into other languages with a priority on ASL and they welcome support. Thadeu Luz Thadeu Luz is entrepreneur, data scientist and full-stack engineer with a background in 3D Animation, Video Compositing and Architecture. In early 2018 I have joined the Google Developers Experts program as a Firebase Expert. He’s CPO and founder of Hand Talk, an internationally decorated company that produces automatic sign language interpretation with the help of a friendly virtual 3D Character named Hugo. Cool things of the week Our video for NEXT video First research center in Ghana blog GCP in Finland blog AI Adventures BigQuery and Open Datasets video Dockercon and value of childcare at conferences tweet What is going on in Unite Berlin 2018 blog & Powering up Conncected Game Development blog Interview Hand Talk site & video Firebase Hosting site docs Cloud Functions for Firebase site docs Cloud Functions for Firebase Sample Library github Launchpad Studio site and podcast TensorFlow.js site ML Kit for Firebase site & podcast coming next week Serve Dynamic Content with Cloud Functions docs Google Translate Community site Cloud Machine Learning Engine docs Hand Talk Question of the week What DOES a Go developer need to know about GCP? Where can you find us next? Mark is speaking at the Online Kubernetes Community Meeting on the 21st of June, at 10am Pacific. Melanie is speaking at a joint WiMLDS and PyLadies event “Paths to Data Science” on June 26th and Stanford AI4ALL on June 28th.
This week is all about Voices! 🎶🎤🔊 Mandy Chan joins Melanie and Mark to discuss the intricacies of building user Voice user interfaces with Actions on Google, developing with SSML and more! Mandy Chan Mandy Chan is the developer community manager for the Actions On Google team. Her role is to help expand the funnel of the Actions on Google developer community by creating practical tools and content like http://bit.ly/aog-codelab-1 and http://bit.ly/aog-codelab-2 Mandy began to build voice applications back in early 2016, and since then, she has built more than a dozen Voice Applications on Actions On Google and other platforms. One of her most frequently downloaded open source projects is called the SSML-Builder which creates well-formed Speech Synthesis Markup Language without worrying about string concatenation. You can learn more about her open source project on http://bit.ly/ssml-build When she is not pondering about how to improve the developer experience, you can find her hiking at mountains or learning new magic tricks. You can also learn more about Mandy by following @MandyChanNYC Cool things of the week AI at Google: our principles blog Incorporating Google’s AI Principles into Google Cloud blog Deploying to Google Kubernetes Engine blog Fighting fire with machine learning: two students use TensorFlow to predict wildfires blog Together, we can help Puerto Rico recover donation match Introducing sole-tenant nodes for Google Compute Engine — when sharing isn’t an option blog docs Interview Actions on Google site docs github console g+ community ssml-builder site npm Advanced SSML by Leon blog Actions on Google: SSML docs Actions on Google Codelabs level one level two Dialogflow site docs console Google Assistant SDK for devices site Cloud Functions for Firebase docs Google Action Firebase Services docs To get inspired by some interesting voice applications voice experiment Mandy Chan medium github Systers on June 21st 9AM PST – Getting started with Actions on Google Workshop site Question of the week I want to push a Docker image to Google Container Registry via docker push. How can I set things up so that I don’t have to use gcloud docker -- push every time? Pushing and Pulling Images docs Authentication Methods docs Where can you find us next? Mark is speaking at the San Francisco Kubernetes Meetup: Scaling Game Servers and the Conduit Service Mesh on June 14th, and also speaking at the Online Kubernetes Community Meeting on the 21st of June, at 10am Pacific. Melanie is speaking at a joint WiMLDS and PyLadies event “Paths to Data Science” on June 26th and Stanford AI4ALL on June 28th.
Juliet Hougland and Michelle Casbon are on the podcast this week to talk about data science with Melanie and Mark. We had a great discussion about methodology, applications, tools, pipelines, challenges and resources. Juliet shared insights into the unique data science ownership workflow from idea to deployment at Stitch Fix, and Michelle dove into how Kubeflow is playing a role to help drive reliability in model development and deployment. Juliet Hougland Juliet Hougland leads the Workflow, Environment, and Execution team at Stichfix. She is a data scientist and engineer with expertise in computational mathematics and years of hands-on machine learning and big data experience. She has built and deployed production ML models, advised Fortune 500 companies on infrastructure and worked on a variety of open source projects (Apache Spark, Scalding, and Kiji) at the intersection of big data and machine learning. Michelle Casbon Michelle Casbon is a Senior Engineer on the Google Cloud Platform Developer Relations team, where she focuses on open source contributions and community engagement for machine learning and big data tools. Prior to joining Google, she was at several San Francisco-based startups as a Senior Engineer and Director of Data Science. Within these roles, she built and shipped machine learning products on distributed platforms using both AWS and GCP. Michelle’s development experience spans more than a decade and has primarily focused on multilingual natural language processing, system architecture and integration, and continuous delivery pipelines for machine learning applications. She especially loves working with open source projects and is an active contributor to Kubeflow. Michelle holds a masters degree from the University of Cambridge. Cool things of the week Sandeep Dinesh: Kubernetes Best Practices YouTube CNCF TOC voted to accept Helm as an incubation-level hosted project to CNCF site Andriod P in Beta blog Agones 0.2.0 site Securing cloud-connected devices with Cloud IoT and Microchip blog Interview flotilla-os repo Kubeflow repo Cloud Dataproc site & docs Spark site & community site scikit-learn site xgboost repo PyTorch site TensorFlow site and github Kubernetes site github Introducing ultramem Google Compute Engine machine types blog #114 Machine Learning Bias and Fairness with Timnit Gebru and Margaret Mitchell podcast Machine Learning Flash Clards site Open Source Data Science Masters site DockerCon SF site Question of the week If I have written a gRPC Service, but I’m using a language/platform that isn’t supported - is there any way I can access it as REST? grpc-gateway Envoy proxy Transcoding Where can you find us next? Mark is speaking at the San Francisco Kubernetes Meetup: Scaling Game Servers and the Conduit Service Mesh on June 14th. Melanie is speaking at a joint WiMLDS and PyLadies event “Paths to Data Science” on June 26th and Stanford AI4ALL on June 28th.
Mandy Waite joins Mark and Melanie to share what is developer relations and how trust and empathy are key to its success. We discuss meeting developers where they are and the wide variety of differing communities that exist across the technology ecosystem. Mandy Waite Mandy Waite has worked at Google for nearly 8 years, 6 of which have been spent growing and nurturing the Cloud Advocacy team. She heads up the Infrastructure and Ops Advocacy team in Google Cloud with a focus on Cloud Native, DevOps, SRE, Observability and Security. Cool things of the week Better cost control with Google Cloud Billing programmatic notifications blog Music in Motion: a Firebase and IoT story blog Google Cloud Codelabs and Challenges codelabs Kubernetes Podcast site and blog Interview Google Cloud Platform site #46 Borg and K8s with John Wilkes podcast #118 OpenCensus with Morgan McLean and JBD podcast Felipe Hoffa & BigQuery reddit, blog and podcast Livestreaming with Jen Tong Twitch, Holden Karau Twitch, and Chris Broadfoot Twitch Ben Treynor on What is ‘Site Reliability Engineering’ interview Solomon Hykes at dotScale on Docker video Istio site and #85 Istio with Varun Talwar and Sven Mawson podcast Kubernetes site Docker site The Core Competencies of Developer Relations blog Question of the week Where do I go to learn about GDPR in regards to Google Cloud Platform? Google Cloud: Ready for GDPR blog Google Cloud & the General Data Protection Regulation site Where can you find us next? Mark is speaking at the Monthly SF Game Development Community, presenting on You Can’t Just Add More Servers on May the 30th in San Francisco. Melanie is speaking at a joint WiMLDS and PyLadies event “Paths to Data Science” on June 26th. More details to come.
Chief Decision Scientist, Cassie Kozyrkov joins Mark and Melanie this week to explain data science, analytics, machine learning and statistical inference, in relation to decision intelligence. Cassie Kozyrkov As Chief Decision Scientist at Google Cloud, Cassie advises leadership teams on decision process, AI strategy, and building data-driven organizations. She works to democratize statistical thinking and machine learning so that everyone - Google, its customers, the world! - can harness the beauty and power of data. She is the innovator behind the practice of Decision Intelligence Engineering at Google and she has personally trained over 15,000 Googlers in machine learning, statistics, and data-driven decision-making. Before her current role, she served in Google’s Office of the CTO as Chief Data Scientist. Prior to joining Google, Cassie worked as a data scientist and consultant. She holds degrees in mathematical statistics, economics, psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. When she’s not working, you’re most likely to find Cassie at the theater, in an art museum, exploring the world, or curled up with a good novel. Cool things of the week Cloud ML Engine adds Cloud TPU support for training blog docs Google Kubernetes Engine 1.10 is generally available and ready for the enterprise blog Introducing ultramem Google Compute Engine machine types blog Increase performance while reducing costs with the new App Engine scheduler blog docs Interview Decision Intelligence wikipedia Redhat Summit Keynote youtube Data Analytics wikipedia Statistical Analysis wikipedia Machine Learning wikipedia Deep Learning wikipedia There are several other episodes that provide insights into data science: #31 TensorFlow with Eli Bixby podcast #84 Kaggle with Wendy Kan podcast #109 Cloud AutoML Vision with Amy Unruh and Sara Robinson podcast #113 Open Source TensorFlow with Yifei Feng podcast #122 Project Jupyter with Jessica Forde, Yuvi Panda and Chris Holdgraf podcast As well as case studies on real world problems: #91 The Future of Media with Machine Learning with Amit Pande podcast #115 Google Play Marketing with Dom Elliott and Stewart Bryson podcast Question of the week How can I secure my Google Cloud Platoform acoount using a YubiKey? Securing your Cloud Platform Account with Security Keys docs Encrypting Google Application Default and gcloud credentials with GPG SmardCard blog Where can you find us next? Mark will be speaking at the Monthly SF Game Development Community, presenting on You Can’t Just Add More Servers on May the 30th in San Francisco. Melanie is speaking at a joint WiMLDS and PyLadies event “Paths to Data Science” on June 26th. More details to come.
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Wrangling data with Python’s libraries and packages.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk with Katharine Jarmul, a Python developer and data analyst whose company, Kjamistan, provides consulting and training on topics surrounding machine learning, natural language processing, and data testing. Jarmul is the co-author (along with Jacqueline Kazil) of the O’Reilly book Data Wrangling with Python, and she has presented the live online training course Practical Data Cleaning with Python.Discussion points: How data wrangling enables you to take real-world data and “clean it, organize it, validate it, and put it in some format you can actually work with,” says Jarmul. Why Python has become a preferred language for use in data science: Jarmul cites the accessibility of the language and the emergence of packages such as NumPy, pandas, SciPy, and scikit-learn. Jarmul calls pandas “Excel on steroids” and says, “it allows you to manipulate tabular data, and transform it quite easily. For anyone using structured, tabular data, you can’t go wrong with doing some part of your analysis in pandas.” She cites gensim and spaCy as her favorite NLP Python libraries, praising them for “the ability to just install a library and have it do quite a lot of deep learning or machine learning tasks for you.” Other links: Check out the video Building Data Pipelines with Python, presented by Jarmul. Check out the video Data Wrangling and Analysis with Python, presented by Jarmul. Jarmul is one of the founders of the group PyLadies, which focuses on helping more women become active participants and leaders in the Python open source community.
The O’Reilly Programming Podcast: Wrangling data with Python’s libraries and packages.In this episode of the O’Reilly Programming Podcast, I talk with Katharine Jarmul, a Python developer and data analyst whose company, Kjamistan, provides consulting and training on topics surrounding machine learning, natural language processing, and data testing. Jarmul is the co-author (along with Jacqueline Kazil) of the O’Reilly book Data Wrangling with Python, and she has presented the live online training course Practical Data Cleaning with Python.Discussion points: How data wrangling enables you to take real-world data and “clean it, organize it, validate it, and put it in some format you can actually work with,” says Jarmul. Why Python has become a preferred language for use in data science: Jarmul cites the accessibility of the language and the emergence of packages such as NumPy, pandas, SciPy, and scikit-learn. Jarmul calls pandas “Excel on steroids” and says, “it allows you to manipulate tabular data, and transform it quite easily. For anyone using structured, tabular data, you can’t go wrong with doing some part of your analysis in pandas.” She cites gensim and spaCy as her favorite NLP Python libraries, praising them for “the ability to just install a library and have it do quite a lot of deep learning or machine learning tasks for you.” Other links: Check out the video Building Data Pipelines with Python, presented by Jarmul. Check out the video Data Wrangling and Analysis with Python, presented by Jarmul. Jarmul is one of the founders of the group PyLadies, which focuses on helping more women become active participants and leaders in the Python open source community.
Hoje, conversamos com a Paula Grangeiro que nos contou sobre sua tragetória com programação, meios de pagamento plataformas Microsoft e Python e é claro Pyladies.
Olá pessoal e sejam bem-vindos à mais um episódio do Castálio Podcast! Nossa convidada de hoje atualmente trabalha como programadora na Stone Pagamentos, é voluntária das PyLadies Brasil, Django Girls e Rails Girls. Além disso tudo, ela também palestrou nos eventos CaiPyRa, Python Brasil, ganhou o Prêmio Dorneles Tremea, é …
Annapoornima Koppad is a director of the PSF, founder of the Bangalore chapter of PyLadies, and is a Python instructor at the Indian Institute of Science. In this week's episode she talks about how she got started with Python, her experience running the PyLadies meetup, and working with the PSF.
One of the great strengths of the Python community is the diversity of backgrounds that our practitioners come from. This week Lorena Mesa talks about how her focus on political science and civic engagement led her to a career in software engineering and data analysis. In addition to her professional career she founded the Chicago chapter of PyLadies, helps teach women and kids how to program, and was voted onto the board of the PSF.
Dr. Julie Krugler Hollek, co-organizer of PyLadies San Francisco and Data Scientist at Twitter, joins us to discuss efforts to democratize participation in open source communities and the future of data science. PyLadies helps people who identify as women become participants in open source Python projects like The SciPy Stack, a specification that provides access to machine learning and data visualization tools. Dr. Hollek highlights the ways that her own engagement with Pyladies and Hackbright Academy laid the foundation for her current role as a Data Scientist at Twitter. Additionally, Dr. Hollek addresses the importance of ethical data use in creating unbiased data science algorithms. For more information on PyLadies, please visit http://www.pyladies.com/ and follow Dr. Hollek on Twitter at https://twitter.com/jkru.
Check out RailsClips! 01:53 - Michele Titolo and Women Who Code Introduction Twitter Blog Facebook 02:15 - Origin Story 501(c) Organization 03:11 - Stated Mission “Inspire women to excel in technology careers” 04:12 - Mentorship Glassbreakers (A peer mentorship community for professional women) 08:54 - Getting Started and Getting Involved 11:27 - Value 12:42 - Remote/Virtual Membership/Communication 15:08 - What Makes Women Who Code Different (from other groups)? 18:02 - Is there a need for groups like this? What issues do these address? 22:34 - Implementing Diversity into the Workplace Job Postings Michele's tweet about a job posting Practical and Universal Interview Questions Workplace Culture Benefits Communication & Teamwork Cate Hudson: Programmers and Racecars 32:29 - Terminology (Using words like “guys”) 35:16 - Is it really harder for women to get jobs? Resume Anonymization Dropping Out/Reentering the Tech Industry Re-Recruit From the Leaky Pipeline (Model View Culture article) 43:13 - The Community at Large (How can we help make the community more open and welcome?) Inclusive Events Codes of Conduct Change Within *Your Own* Organization (Advocacy) Learning About Other People (Be Empathetic; Be Respectful) 46:08 - Are there people who can help people/companies diversify? Ashe Dryden The Diverse Team by Ashe Dryden The Ada Initiative Natural Introductions 49:49 - How can I help? (as a man) Donations Fund Club AlterConf Volunteering 51:47 - Study Resources (Proof) Model View Culture Cosmodrome (from Brianna Wu) Groups and Mailing Lists (mentioned in this episode) Glassbreakers Women Who Code SF (San Francisco) DevChix Tech LadyMafia Girls Who Code Black Girls Code PyLadies Ladies Who Code RailsBridge App Camp For Girls Girl Develop It Mobile Bridge Geekettes PowerToFly MotherCoders The Ada Initiative Fund Club AlterConf Picks Power Up Your Animations! with Marin Todorov (Alondo) Poker Theory & Analytics (Alondo) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Kate Heddleston: How Our Engineering Environments are Killing Diversity (Michele) Ashe Dryden: The Responsibility of "Diversity" (Michele) Conference proposal writing: From brainstorm to submit @ 360iDev 2015 (Michele)
Check out RailsClips! 01:53 - Michele Titolo and Women Who Code Introduction Twitter Blog Facebook 02:15 - Origin Story 501(c) Organization 03:11 - Stated Mission “Inspire women to excel in technology careers” 04:12 - Mentorship Glassbreakers (A peer mentorship community for professional women) 08:54 - Getting Started and Getting Involved 11:27 - Value 12:42 - Remote/Virtual Membership/Communication 15:08 - What Makes Women Who Code Different (from other groups)? 18:02 - Is there a need for groups like this? What issues do these address? 22:34 - Implementing Diversity into the Workplace Job Postings Michele's tweet about a job posting Practical and Universal Interview Questions Workplace Culture Benefits Communication & Teamwork Cate Hudson: Programmers and Racecars 32:29 - Terminology (Using words like “guys”) 35:16 - Is it really harder for women to get jobs? Resume Anonymization Dropping Out/Reentering the Tech Industry Re-Recruit From the Leaky Pipeline (Model View Culture article) 43:13 - The Community at Large (How can we help make the community more open and welcome?) Inclusive Events Codes of Conduct Change Within *Your Own* Organization (Advocacy) Learning About Other People (Be Empathetic; Be Respectful) 46:08 - Are there people who can help people/companies diversify? Ashe Dryden The Diverse Team by Ashe Dryden The Ada Initiative Natural Introductions 49:49 - How can I help? (as a man) Donations Fund Club AlterConf Volunteering 51:47 - Study Resources (Proof) Model View Culture Cosmodrome (from Brianna Wu) Groups and Mailing Lists (mentioned in this episode) Glassbreakers Women Who Code SF (San Francisco) DevChix Tech LadyMafia Girls Who Code Black Girls Code PyLadies Ladies Who Code RailsBridge App Camp For Girls Girl Develop It Mobile Bridge Geekettes PowerToFly MotherCoders The Ada Initiative Fund Club AlterConf Picks Power Up Your Animations! with Marin Todorov (Alondo) Poker Theory & Analytics (Alondo) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Kate Heddleston: How Our Engineering Environments are Killing Diversity (Michele) Ashe Dryden: The Responsibility of "Diversity" (Michele) Conference proposal writing: From brainstorm to submit @ 360iDev 2015 (Michele)
Talk Python To Me - Python conversations for passionate developers
See the full show notes for this episode on the website at talkpython.fm/15.
02:32 - Mark Bates Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Boston Ruby Users Group @bostonrb MetaCasts: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts @metacasts 03:14 - Scott Feinberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog WePay @WePay @wepaystatus 03:46 - Community Values 2014 Videos - WindyCityRails Lightning Talks (Scott’s is first) Scott Feinberg: Where does Ruby go from here? (The Happiness Manifesto) [GitHub] the-happiness-manifesto 05:32 - Ruby Community Standards and Values Testing Programming Should Be Fun and Enjoyable Pairing Large Regional Conferences and Meetups 07:33 - User Groups Lambda Lounge @LambdaLounge Netflix Open Source Group 10:18 - Polyglot Conferences Midwest.io 2014 - MythBashers: Adventures in Overlooked Technologies - Avdi Grimm [GitHub] A web server written in Bash Great Wide Open @AllThingsOpen CodeMash @codemash 13:07 - Including and Getting Newbies Involved in Conference and Community Culture Generations Boot Camps Launch Academy @LaunchAcademy_ Hugs 20:41 - Diversity and Codes of Conduct PyLadies PyLadies Chapters (Twitter) RailsBridge @railsbridge Rails Girls @railsgirls 23:08 - AlterConf @AlterConf Ashe Dryden @ashedryden 24:22 - PyCon @pycon 25:31 - HappinessConf @Happiness_Conf Diversity Black Girls Code @blackgirlscode Women Who Code @WomenWhoCode 28:30 - Developer Happiness and Invoking Community Values Within Corporate Company Culture Ruby Rogues Episode #191: The Developer Happiness Team with Kerri Miller PluralSight PluralSight Author Summit Trust Roles of Influence Navigating Office Politics 38:03 - Agile Software Development and Productivity The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals [TED Talk] Bruce Feiler: Agile programming — for your family 40:41 - “The Ruby Diaspora” Mark Bates - Panel: The Future of Ruby - Burlington Ruby Conference 2014 Elixir Programming Elixir: Functional |> Concurrent |> Pragmatic |> Fun by Dave Thomas The Go Programming Language Gophercon @GopherCon 47:47 - Acceptance Accepting Acceptance / Tolerating Intolerance 50:55 - Mentoring Boston Ruby’s “Project Night” Mentor Someone Who Doesn’t Look Like You Picks Love Letter (Coraline) RescueTime (Coraline) Hacking Happy by Dusty Phillips (Jessica) Happiness Conf Coupon Code (Scott) HappinessConf Speakers Page (Scott) The Flight Deal (Scott) iStat Menus (Scott) HappinessConf (Mark) The Go Programming Language (Mark) Use the Coupon Code: ROGUES to get your first month free: MetaCasts.tv: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts (Mark)
02:32 - Mark Bates Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Boston Ruby Users Group @bostonrb MetaCasts: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts @metacasts 03:14 - Scott Feinberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog WePay @WePay @wepaystatus 03:46 - Community Values 2014 Videos - WindyCityRails Lightning Talks (Scott’s is first) Scott Feinberg: Where does Ruby go from here? (The Happiness Manifesto) [GitHub] the-happiness-manifesto 05:32 - Ruby Community Standards and Values Testing Programming Should Be Fun and Enjoyable Pairing Large Regional Conferences and Meetups 07:33 - User Groups Lambda Lounge @LambdaLounge Netflix Open Source Group 10:18 - Polyglot Conferences Midwest.io 2014 - MythBashers: Adventures in Overlooked Technologies - Avdi Grimm [GitHub] A web server written in Bash Great Wide Open @AllThingsOpen CodeMash @codemash 13:07 - Including and Getting Newbies Involved in Conference and Community Culture Generations Boot Camps Launch Academy @LaunchAcademy_ Hugs 20:41 - Diversity and Codes of Conduct PyLadies PyLadies Chapters (Twitter) RailsBridge @railsbridge Rails Girls @railsgirls 23:08 - AlterConf @AlterConf Ashe Dryden @ashedryden 24:22 - PyCon @pycon 25:31 - HappinessConf @Happiness_Conf Diversity Black Girls Code @blackgirlscode Women Who Code @WomenWhoCode 28:30 - Developer Happiness and Invoking Community Values Within Corporate Company Culture Ruby Rogues Episode #191: The Developer Happiness Team with Kerri Miller PluralSight PluralSight Author Summit Trust Roles of Influence Navigating Office Politics 38:03 - Agile Software Development and Productivity The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals [TED Talk] Bruce Feiler: Agile programming — for your family 40:41 - “The Ruby Diaspora” Mark Bates - Panel: The Future of Ruby - Burlington Ruby Conference 2014 Elixir Programming Elixir: Functional |> Concurrent |> Pragmatic |> Fun by Dave Thomas The Go Programming Language Gophercon @GopherCon 47:47 - Acceptance Accepting Acceptance / Tolerating Intolerance 50:55 - Mentoring Boston Ruby’s “Project Night” Mentor Someone Who Doesn’t Look Like You Picks Love Letter (Coraline) RescueTime (Coraline) Hacking Happy by Dusty Phillips (Jessica) Happiness Conf Coupon Code (Scott) HappinessConf Speakers Page (Scott) The Flight Deal (Scott) iStat Menus (Scott) HappinessConf (Mark) The Go Programming Language (Mark) Use the Coupon Code: ROGUES to get your first month free: MetaCasts.tv: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts (Mark)
02:32 - Mark Bates Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Boston Ruby Users Group @bostonrb MetaCasts: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts @metacasts 03:14 - Scott Feinberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog WePay @WePay @wepaystatus 03:46 - Community Values 2014 Videos - WindyCityRails Lightning Talks (Scott’s is first) Scott Feinberg: Where does Ruby go from here? (The Happiness Manifesto) [GitHub] the-happiness-manifesto 05:32 - Ruby Community Standards and Values Testing Programming Should Be Fun and Enjoyable Pairing Large Regional Conferences and Meetups 07:33 - User Groups Lambda Lounge @LambdaLounge Netflix Open Source Group 10:18 - Polyglot Conferences Midwest.io 2014 - MythBashers: Adventures in Overlooked Technologies - Avdi Grimm [GitHub] A web server written in Bash Great Wide Open @AllThingsOpen CodeMash @codemash 13:07 - Including and Getting Newbies Involved in Conference and Community Culture Generations Boot Camps Launch Academy @LaunchAcademy_ Hugs 20:41 - Diversity and Codes of Conduct PyLadies PyLadies Chapters (Twitter) RailsBridge @railsbridge Rails Girls @railsgirls 23:08 - AlterConf @AlterConf Ashe Dryden @ashedryden 24:22 - PyCon @pycon 25:31 - HappinessConf @Happiness_Conf Diversity Black Girls Code @blackgirlscode Women Who Code @WomenWhoCode 28:30 - Developer Happiness and Invoking Community Values Within Corporate Company Culture Ruby Rogues Episode #191: The Developer Happiness Team with Kerri Miller PluralSight PluralSight Author Summit Trust Roles of Influence Navigating Office Politics 38:03 - Agile Software Development and Productivity The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals [TED Talk] Bruce Feiler: Agile programming — for your family 40:41 - “The Ruby Diaspora” Mark Bates - Panel: The Future of Ruby - Burlington Ruby Conference 2014 Elixir Programming Elixir: Functional |> Concurrent |> Pragmatic |> Fun by Dave Thomas The Go Programming Language Gophercon @GopherCon 47:47 - Acceptance Accepting Acceptance / Tolerating Intolerance 50:55 - Mentoring Boston Ruby’s “Project Night” Mentor Someone Who Doesn’t Look Like You Picks Love Letter (Coraline) RescueTime (Coraline) Hacking Happy by Dusty Phillips (Jessica) Happiness Conf Coupon Code (Scott) HappinessConf Speakers Page (Scott) The Flight Deal (Scott) iStat Menus (Scott) HappinessConf (Mark) The Go Programming Language (Mark) Use the Coupon Code: ROGUES to get your first month free: MetaCasts.tv: HD Screencasts for GO Enthusiasts (Mark)
Thursday is the cofounder of Urgency, Inc., an online marketing agency focused on technical clients. She’s been blogging for over 10 years and has written for a variety of publications. She is a true renaissance woman whose interests include diversity in tech, the use of punctuation, crypto currencies, analytics impact on content strategy, gifs, and open source business models. She is a cofounder of PDX Shelter, a Portland based nonprofit startup, and an organizer at PyLadies PDX. She comes on the show today to talk to Charlie about the issues women face in the tech industry and other things related to tech and business. Key Takeaways: 1:59 – Thursday grew up in a family of entrepreneurs. 4:00 – Urgency, Inc. was launched at the beginning of this year. 8:01 – A lot of tech companies want to be seen as progressive and modern, but most of those companies are founded by white, straight men who are usually from a middle class to upper class background and don’t think about any experience other than their own. 11:48 – One key starting point in looking at startup companies is looking at how they hire. 15:12 – The number of women who are getting CS degrees is increasing dramatically, but the problem is more a question of keeping women in tech. 16:16 – Investors are less likely to work with women founders, especially women who have families. 21:45 – Being aware of the social issues taking place in companies is the first step to making change. 27:05 – GamerGate started as a posting by a guy who was upset with his ex-girlfriend who was a game developer, and he accused her of sleeping with game journalists to get better reviews and eventually turned into attacks on several women. 32:15 – The same tropes that Anita Sarkeesian has identified in video games are also very visible in other forms of media. It’s a very prevalent thought pattern. 35:40 – PyLadies is a Python user group which for just women. 37:10 – PDX Shelter is a project that uses technology to address homeless problems. 46:08 – Even though all of these problems in the tech business world may seem huge, just taking one step and doing one thing is on the way to solving them. Mentioned In This Episode: Urgency, Inc. Go Daddy Entrepreneur Magazine PDX Shelter PyLadies PDX Kathy Sierra GamerGate Anita Sarkeesian Startup Weekend Matthew Fountain Firebase
Horst JENS, Gregor PRIDUN und Julia plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/7cwZgP oder http://biertaucher.at
Horst JENS und Gregor PRIDUN plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/7cwZgP oder http://biertaucher.at
Horst JENS und Gregor PRIDUN plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/lFwih2 oder http://biertaucher.at
Horst JENS und Andreas BIDER plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/U1y9E3 oder http://biertaucher.at Bitte nach Möglichkeit diesen Flattr-Link anlicken: http://flattr.com/thing/1700969/Biertaucher-Podcast-Folge-114
Horst JENS und Gregor PRIDUN plaudern mit Florian SCHWEIKERT über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/hdb5A bzw. http://biertaucher.at . Bitte nach Möglichkeit diesen Flattr-Link anlicken: http://flattr.com/thing/1399471/Biertaucher-Podcast-Folge-106
Gregor PRIDUN, Florian Schweikert, Hop und Horst JENS plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Bitcoin News Mit Andreas PETERSSON und Andreas LEHRBAUM und Johannes. Mehr Information, Links, Bilder, Videos, Tags, Transkripte, extra-soundfiles etc. gibt es in den Shownotes: http://goo.gl/QqB0o (bzw. http://biertaucher.at ). Bitte nach Möglichkeit diesen Flattr-Link anlicken: http://flattr.com/thing/1175519/Biertaucher-Podcast-Folge-095