EU Funds New FLOSS Survey on Skills, Employment 166
rishab writes "The EU-funded FLOSSPOLS project is carrying out a survey of developers worldwide. This is a follow-up to the original FLOSS (Free/Libre/Open Source Software) survey in 2002, which was one of the first and most comprehensive surveys of developers - who they are, how they work and why they do it. The new survey aims to provide an update, include new developers, and answer some of the questions that were raised by the first one. In particular, how do developer communities help in learning skills and generating employment, and why is the level of participation by women so low?"
For some odd reason.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:For some odd reason.. (Score:3, Funny)
Not for them is it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is the level of participation of men in, say, nursery school(kindergarten for the Americans), so low?
Men are good at certain things, Women are good at certain things. Regardless of "Equal Oppurtunities" etc. Men and Women are fundamentally different, see that's why there are different words for them.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Come now. Let's not get caught up in "Well, this is just the way things are, and there's no reason to change" nonsense. According to your argument, the lack of women doctors and CEOs in the 1950s was because men and women are 'inherently different', right? Except that there actually was systematic oppression of women in place to prevent them from succeeding in high-paying professions.
It may be true that, in general, men are more likely than women to write software. That doesn't mean that the way things are *now* is a perfect representation of how likely women are compared to men. When you grow up believing that only nerdy, quirky women are involved in math and science (as they are often portrayed in movies, etc.) and you want to fit in, you'll avoid those fields even if you really *would* be good at math or science. Likewise, as a male growing up seeing stereotypes of male hairdressers as gay, it's easy to write off being a hairdresser to avoid being typecast as gay.
Are men and women different? Sure. Men have penises and testicles, and women have vaginas. They're *generally* hormonally different, and *generally* have tendencies toward certain things. That doesn't mean it's useless to examine what factors cause those tendencies, or that it's a good thing that we have self-reinforcing gender stereotypes. Examine behavior rationally - fuck this homebrew "common sense" unscientific bullshit.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:3, Insightful)
And this is where you shoot yourself in the foot. Those same hormones that cause
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:3, Interesting)
And at the same time, you must also look at the social factors behind why women and men do different things. It's not all hormones.
When toy company creates a Barbie doll with unrealistic boobs that says "I hate math", it does have some influence on how young children perceive gender.
I know you don't think it's all hormones, but I thought I would just clear this up
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Sorry, but it takes a screwed up woman to look at a childs toy and compare herself physically to it. How many women have had to deal with the horrible fact that they have nipples? Barbie doesn't have them!
Feminists are grasping at straws.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Actually the original poster was talking about the influence of such toys on young children.
There's also the effect of adults precieving young children differently depending on if they think a child is a boy or a girl.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:3, Insightful)
You cannot ignore the social factors behind a child's mental development. I'm certain that you played with toys when you were a kid, and that those toys have had been influential in your development as a person.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
What method is available to show if a piece of flint was knapped by a man or a woman? Or for that matter any piece of prehistoric technology.
Note that gender roles and stereotypes tend to be most common in industrial societies. But are rarely completly
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
What are the structural differences, and what makes you think they affect "technical work"? There are other explanations for the small number of women, why should anyone buy yours?
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
This should be quite simple to test. Have someone identify if a set of MRI's come from a man's or a woman's brain.
Where this theory runs into problems is that function, even structure, of mammalian brains is also affected by environment. e.g. it's been shown that the left brain/right brain split differs between Japanese and Europeans.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2, Interesting)
I said no such thing. We pretty much have a society, now, where women and men *cannot* be discriminated against when going for jobs and whatnot.
Women simply aren't attracted to computer jobs, for whatever reasons I don't care. Why do we need to attract women to these jobs? To balance some fictional scale until women and men have equal 50% representation in every imaginable job?
If a woman seriously wants a job in computing, then there is no reason whatsoever that she cannot get one
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:5, Informative)
While growing up, I had adults and peers alike (not all of them, of course) treat me as if I'm some sort of freak for showing an interest in computers. Others would treat me like I was some sort of idiot who was incapable of doing the assigned work myself. When you're trying to fit in, it's easier to find a new interest than to endure those attitudes. It took several tries with my guidance councelor to get her to put together my records to submit to the college I went to because she kept questioning if I really wanted to do this. Not exactly a morale booster.
When I got to college, the male to female ratio was 6 : 1. Not only was there the minority of guys who hit on every girl they came into contact with (a few strayed over into sexual harassment), but there were very few girls who could sympathize with you.
If you are assertive, you're labeled a bitch. When you go for jobs, there are people who think, "Well, she's going to want to start a family soon, so I'd better not go with her; she's going to be undependable", without having any evidence of her dependability.
No, can't see why any young woman would have a problem going into a science field with those conditions. Any attempt to make science seem "girl-friendly" is doomed as long as the situtations that I mention are common enough. It's a cheap marketing ploy at best.
Having said all of that, I am a strong believer of matching the person to the position. I don't care if your advantage comes from your natural talent, physical build, education, experience, personality, etc. but, it had better be an honest match. You lose a lot when you confuse your assumptions with reality.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
When you go for jobs, there are people who think, "Well, she's going to want to start a family soon, so I'd better not go with her; she's going to be undependable"
This is why paternity leave is so vital to even out the marketplace. If companies have to pay for (and accept) the loss of their male employees in just the same way, it puts them on an equal footing. I live in France, where they have this in place, and I think it's a wonderful thing.
Also, with regards to gender "roles": In the companies I wo
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Note that it does have to be an level of leave. Including issues like who pays. Even with this there is still the issue of Stay at Home parents even which parent does a school call first with a sick or injured child.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Quite likely an employer would get in trouble if the asked that question directly. Possibly from they experience that is a real risk...
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
I'm shocked every time I hear this crap. Role model? Who
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2, Informative)
I'm shocked every time I hear this crap. Role model? Who the fuck needs a role model? I can't do homework because I don't have a role model?
Of course you don't need to have a role model to do homework. Maybe role model was a bad choice of words. The point is, girls are often given the impression that if they go into science, they'll end up as humorless, ugly, old maids.
Through college I was always harassed by idiots who couldn't do their work. The guys pretended like we were friends, the girls flirted.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Welcome to life.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:3, Interesting)
Generally, if you're a keyboard monkey - no one cares much about how you look.
A nice appearance on the other hand often means a person can earn more money for less work.
Those "cushy" jobs are generally not worrying about pointer math and proper object destruction.
So "nice looking people" migh be tempted away from computer jobs.
Now consider this:
As long as women WANT to "marry UP" and can get away with it (and who wouldn't) they will always find themselves in relationship
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
This also has the effect of meaning that average figures for men's earnings will tend to be greater than average figures of women's earnings. Which is something about which a lot of fuss is made.
It is also possible that the average amount of money available for a woman to spend is greater than the average amount of money availabl
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
A great example of (ficticious) affermative action (a result from PC pressure groups such as feminists) is here [theregister.co.uk] (BOFH from theregister.co.uk)
So long as we don't try to even things out (Score:3, Insightful)
I am also completely against changinf science or engineering to give it more "girl appeal". Doing so will stop science/engineering being what it is.The worst possible scenario is some sort of state intervention that applies quotas (eg. 40% of your proggrammers gotta be female to get a tax cut).
Analogy: 90%+ of cosmetics are bought by females for their own use.. Imagine if the state said that they had to sell at least 40% of their cosmetics to men. It would destro
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
There's a distinct right-brain left-brain difference between men and Women, this makes it easier for Woman to process languages and Men to process visual abstractions like programming.
This show up as:
9 time more men are affected with Dyslexia than women [alphabetmats.com].
Gay men read maps like women [newscientist.com]
Male-Female Brain Differences [brainplace.com].
It does NOT matter (Score:2)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1)
You forgot breasts.
On that note, I learned everything I need to know in kindergarten
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Nor does it prove that "the way things are now" is not a reasonable representation. Neither side can "prove" that the actual ratio is or isn't where it "should" be (for some arbitrary definition of "should"). However, claiming that it "should" be 50/50 for everything is, you seem to agree, inane and ignorant
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
That isn't likely to happen for quite a while. Gender discrimination is complex, different discriminations interact with each other, things such as "peer-backed" discrimination tend to be ignored and there are plenty of advocates of all sorts of discrimination...
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:3, Insightful)
True, it's not easy. And many may find it hard to cope with this, but it's not a problem that can be handled on an institutional level. You have to first address the problem yourself, within yourself. When YOU are judging a person not on the ba
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
Neither men nor woman are a homogeneous group. Even if X has mostly men interested in it that dosn't mean that it isn't perfectly normal for women to also be interested in it.
That doesn't mean it's useless to examine what factors cause those tendencies, or that it's a good thing that we have self-reinforcing gender ster
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
I find your characterization both sexist and offensive as a practitioner of the aforementioned trade. Your characterization of engineers as "yahoo's"[sic] is mean spirited and in my experience with over 400 Electrical Engineering students from two schools in two seperate provinces, wildly inaccurate.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:5, Insightful)
With such an overwhelmingly male audience, you're not going to get a serious discussion on gender equity here unfortunately.
It's a bit of an echo chamber in here.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
50% male / 50% female would be a better environment for debate. 50% is very different then 97%.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2, Interesting)
The most obvious reason why women may be discouraged from writing software is the attitude they face from a predominantly male group.
Have you ever wandered into one of those D&D gaming stores just to see what the fuss is all about. In general, these places make you feel about as welcome as George Bush in Canada. Well that is basically the reception women get from any technical gathering.
Seriously, who wouldn't walk away from that.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
It is because of this attitude, gental readers, that we don't have more women involved in computer programmming in general, and FLOSS in specific.
Yaz.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:5, Insightful)
I really believe that the US's answers to this question are all youth-culture socially ingrained. The educational system doesn't have any way of providing anything like the roll models or mentoring or enough ways of reaching any really smart kid with aptitude who is socialized out of much of anything.
That's a gender-neutral way of saying US youth culture would have to change in order to alter this here. Enough other limiting factors have been removed, I think that's the last one and the biggest.
I have Indian coworkers who tell me that when they went to university, 1/3 of the slots in the science programs were reserved for women, 2/3 for men. The women, in their experience, may not look like they're going to be dominant, but are usually contenders for the very best grades.
I take that as (admittedly anecdotal) evidence that a much larger # of women could participate in computing and succeed if only they were not receiving some sort of short circuit early that kills interest.
Anyhow, ok, I'll grant women are different from men, but that doesn't mean the industry doesn't need to find a way to draw them in. We're just as smart as men and different is GOOD.
Or when was the last time you worked in a seriously multicultural office? Different world views and thought patterns make for constructive and healthy workplaces.
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:1)
Re:Not for them is it? (Score:2)
The very blunt way of putting this (i wish i could think of a better word because its not what i mean): Women good at IT are freaks
FLOSS (Score:2, Funny)
new floss study... (Score:2)
Just Maybe... (Score:1)
Hmmm (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Funny)
so far none of them have realised you can press the 'U' key.
the funniest ones are where they get all the way to countries beginning with the letter 'H', stopping to read and think about each one, before finally realising it's alphabetical and they can just scroll until countries beginning with 'U' appear.
when you guys finally figure out our plot, we'll start putting the USA in random places.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
(unless you mean the css equivalent of <blink>)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
It was a joke actually. You can't do it with the usercontent because the DOM node doesn't give the text in the option as an exposed value.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Your still a judas for *mentioning* the blink tag on
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Would it work better if I used that new browser FrieFaux instead of IE?
Re:Hmmm (Score:2, Funny)
1: Americans don't know that other countries exist.
2: The Ameican government doesn't want Americans to know that other countries exist.
3: Americans don't know the alphabet.
4: Americans can't spell.
5: Americans can't read.
6: Anyone that can't read, spell, doesn't know the alphabet or any geography might as well be an American.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2, Funny)
Ah, but then Canada would come first (yay!), since its country code *also* happens to be 1 (the only differentiator is area code...). And since logically most lists which have the same value in a list get sub-sorted alphabetically.
45 questions. ... eek! (Score:3, Insightful)
It's Hard TO Comment On The Survey (Score:2)
The thing is broken.
Re:It's Hard TO Comment On The Survey (Score:2)
Re:It's Hard TO Comment On The Survey (Score:2)
And everywhere this language went, It was a total loss
Seven Years (Score:3, Funny)
my first reaction (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:my first reaction (Score:2)
That said; I agree with your stance on software patents. Canada, where I'm from, thankfully doesn't yet have them (knock on wood) and Japan, where I live, has them but under the restriction that the invention to be patented must be "a creation of technical ideas utilizing a law of nature", which is probably about as fair as patents for non-software devices/processes.
The Lack of Women (Score:4, Interesting)
By contrast, there's no clear reason why women shouldn't be in CS. The most likely possibility is still that it's a cultural norm, but that doesn't exactly explain why more women would be involved in construction than in CS. It might be a hostile climate, but I would be surprised if the male coders are more aggressive and sexually biased than the average guys on a construction crew. It's really quite a strange situation.
- http://www.theallineed.com/women/05031804.htm [theallineed.com]
"Currently, women workers make up nearly 10 percent of the construction industry or more than 900,000 nationally"
Re:The Lack of Women (Score:2)
Worked in new home construction from 12 to about 18, never once saw a woman framer, plumber, electrition, roofer, sider, landscaper....
Architect... check. The company that we got plans from did have a few women on staff, one or maybe two in design positions.
Also, we did use a cabinent crew that had a woman in it.
Soooo, 2 or three out of a thousand? Two thousand? Something like that.
Those st
Re:The Lack of Women (Score:2)
In general, although the only
Re:The Lack of Women (Score:2)
I suppose women in CS being less than woman in construction is odd, but maybe there are biological reasons to which feminists/'the PC crowd' refuse to accept.
Math is hard! (Score:1)
I have met four females in my lifetime that didn't hate Python (the troupe, not necessarily the language). I am related to two of them. Conversely, I have no interest in unicorns, clothing designers or shiny bits of carbon.
ps: just in case you're a complete dink and take the Subject
Why is this an issue?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Why do we seem to have this societal obsession with getting more women into computer science / engineering, etc? Maybe, just maybe, it's the case that most women just don't *want* to be computer scientists or engineers. I mean, do we have hoardes of women protesting that they tried to get into this field and were discriminated against on a sexual basis (hint: no)?
The opportunities are there for women who *do* want to do this kind of stuff. So tell me again why this "issue" keeps coming up time and time again??
Re:Why is this an issue?? (Score:2)
> the percentage of women so low amongst asphalt
> pouring crews" or anything like that. I also
> don't see any studies asking whey more men aren't
> going into nursing.
You aren't looking very hard.
Re:Why is this an issue?? (Score:2)
That is correct. This topic isn't something I've really made a point to invest a lot of time into studying.
That said, do you have some info you'd like to share with us? Are there really studies questioning why more women aren't pouring asphalt and more men aren't nurses?
Re:Why is this an issue?? (Score:2)
http://www.theallineed.com/women/05031804.htm [theallineed.com]
People *are* asking.
Re:Why is this an issue?? (Score:2)
A lot of the time the people selecting the criteria involved have their own sets of biases. You are equally unlikely to see claims about women being "under-represented" in the prison population or men being "under-represented" in the "stay at home spouse" population.
Why do we seem to have this so
Re:Why is this an issue?? (Score:2)
Its confusion. I've worked with a couple women in the computer field, and I found them on average equal to the average man in the field. I haven't done a statistical study, but I tend to believe that by any statistical measure they are equal. That is they are as likely to be better than me as any other man is, and as likely to be worse than me as any other man would be.
I've worked construction. It is a fact that the women I worked with did not have the physical strength to do the job like I could.
Aaarggh, replying to myself, bad form I know... (Score:2)
why is the level of participation by women so low?
Re:Aaarggh, replying to myself, bad form I know... (Score:2)
Why Fewer Women (Score:4, Informative)
Most FOSS projects start as an after-work (or school), spare-time project. Most women work, and even working women are expected to handle housework, shopping, and child care after work. Where is the spare time left for anything else?
Re:Why Fewer Women (Score:1)
I'll tell you why. (Score:2)
The stereotypes start with mom and dad the day they choose pink or blue.
Re:Why Fewer Women (Score:2)
And men are not expected to help with housework, shopping and child care after work? that is a very messed up household.
Re:Women (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Women (Score:2)
Re:Women (Score:3, Interesting)
I mean, I don't stay awake at night worrying why men aren't better represented in advertising, nursing, admin, HR, child care, midwifery, marketing and all the other careers which are (mainly) dominated by women.
Also consider the following: A women applies for a programming job and a man applies for a pre-school child care job. Which application is treated with the most prejudice
Re:Women (Score:2)
The women I know of that do, tend to be anti-social.
Re:Women (Score:2)
So you may be right that a lot of sma
Re:Women (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Women (Score:5, Insightful)
Results count for more than studies.
Re:Women (Score:2)
(direct or contract, it doesn't matter)
You can bet they have plenty of vietnam vetrans,
homosexuals and transwhatevers, paralysed people,
etc. It's NASA, OK? They have quotas to meet.
Re:Women (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Women (Score:1)
why, do you wish to use the same ratio in order to achieve 99.9% perfect code?
'cause that's a good idea.
Re:women are sick... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Women do contribute (Score:1)
Re:Women do contribute (Score:2)
She wouldn't spot stuff like "thats supposed to be a pointer to an int, not an int" but every time ive had her read my code she says "your missing a semicolon" or "you didn't close the bracket from that if statement".
Re:WooHoo! Bunfight! (Score:2)