Is it really putting off prospective female engineers?
I would think today's sasy women could just scoff at it.
I'm sure there are more pressing and direct issues related to diversity and equality, though on the other hand, there are probably much better images to use to use as a standard, if only on a technical level.
But benchmarks would have to be rerun for all the algorithms.
> Is it really putting off prospective female engineers?
Well, at least it's an easy theory to test. Is there an unusual dearth of female engineers in the image processing field, compared to other computing specialties? If there was, I'm pretty sure we would have noticed.
By the way, even as a guy, I do find the overuse of this particular image as a "standard" for the field to be somewhat distasteful, or at least unfortunate. But this is also something where people can have different views.
jacknews|6 years ago
I would think today's sasy women could just scoff at it.
I'm sure there are more pressing and direct issues related to diversity and equality, though on the other hand, there are probably much better images to use to use as a standard, if only on a technical level.
But benchmarks would have to be rerun for all the algorithms.
zozbot234|6 years ago
Well, at least it's an easy theory to test. Is there an unusual dearth of female engineers in the image processing field, compared to other computing specialties? If there was, I'm pretty sure we would have noticed.
By the way, even as a guy, I do find the overuse of this particular image as a "standard" for the field to be somewhat distasteful, or at least unfortunate. But this is also something where people can have different views.
thih9|6 years ago