needlessly2's comments

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: How I, a woman in tech, benefited from sexism in Silicon Valley

>You can't arbitrarily say that the line stops at one thing

I never said that or implied that. You misinterpreted. It makes zero sense to bring up rape when talking about this Google manifesto. I do think sexism and racism occur in the tech industry. However, not comparable in extremity to rape. This trivializes the experiences that rape victims actually do face. I'm not a moderator of course, so say what you want. But it makes your talking points looking appear ridiculous and nonsensical. Perhaps, your comments would be more relevant in the Binary Capital case.

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: A note on programmer salaries

>$120k is San Fran could easily be a worse quality of life than $40k in Central America (too broad to say for certain).

this is the dumbest thing i've heard today. Stop exaggerating.

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: How I, a woman in tech, benefited from sexism in Silicon Valley

i'm always confused when people confuse males in tech as fratty. It makes zero sense. And it shows a lack of understanding in males. For the most part, guys who code for fun are more often the dungeons+dragon, sci-fi, and anime lover type of guys. Not the meatheads and backwards baseball cap guys associated with fratty.

That's like comparing the type of women who like sewing and knitting with sorority girls.

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: How I, a woman in tech, benefited from sexism in Silicon Valley

>I think this whole claiming that being a victim as a self-fulfilling prophecy is flawed. It's hard to say a trans woman who's been murdered or raped had it coming.

wow, looks like things have escalated fast.

We've gone from Google employees who earn 100k+ salaries as software engineers to rape...

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: How I, a woman in tech, benefited from sexism in Silicon Valley

>“She’s good for a woman, so even though she doesn’t do as well as that guy, she still gets the same scores because she’s in the women’s league.”

But it would still be viewed as sexist if the interviewers gave her lower scores. The only way not to be sexist is if you absolutely assess it right. Not too high and not too low.

(not saying the author is calling them sexist)

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: As a Woman in Tech, I Realized: These Are Not My People

This a little bit of overlap, but I don't think there's significant overlap between gamers and software developers.

Writing code and playing a video are two very different experiences. Sure, you'll need to test the game, but testing games is not a fun time contrary to popular belief. And more important, the vast majority of software developers do not actually work in the video game industry. Most either work in systems development or make CRUD apps.

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: As a Woman in Tech, I Realized: These Are Not My People

>The founders themselves often started programming as kids

i'm not sure where you get this conclusion that those who enjoy extracurricular programming often started as kids.

Usually those who started as a kid means they were fortunate enough to have parents who were programmers. Even if they're parents weren't that case, then usually its the case of just doing html/css on myspace

needlessly2 | 8 years ago | on: As a Woman in Tech, I Realized: These Are Not My People

I kind of disagree with the gaming part.

I'm almost sure that most hardcore gamers actually never become part of the CS/SWE crowd because of video game addiction. Gaming and software development are two very different domains. Hardcore gamers usually are not motivated, accomplish very little, and lack in career development.

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