xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Ellen Pao: My lawsuit failed. Others won’t
xxSparkleSxx's comments
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is Georgia Tech's Online Master in CS Worth It?
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Why TV newswomen look like they’re going to a cocktail party
News is a product like any other. If the way anchors look and dress are correlated with the number of viewers and the station's bottom line, what are we supposed to do in a capitalist society? Pretend there is no value in aesthetics or provocative imagery?
I bet if programmers dressing provocatively was positively correlated with increased profits, we'd see some low-key encouragement on programmer attire.
I still think it's bullshit for women, but I can see a case for wanting sexy people in front of a camera. If looks didn't factor into anchors careers in any way whatsoever (for both men and women), I am willing to bet over half of current news anchors would never have become anchors in the first place.
However, I do think if stations want their anchors to be glorified models then they need to be upfront about it from the get-go so all people are aware of the requirements and stipulations of the careers/jobs they are pursuing.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Silent 10-Minute Track Reaches Top 100 on iTunes
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Ask a Female Engineer: Thoughts on the Google Memo
That's just all sorts of crazy/anti-intellectualism
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is Georgia Tech's Online Master in CS Worth It?
Still cost me slightly over 40k even though Innever stepped foot on campus.
It's a total rip-off, but only in the sense that I couldn't get a decent paying job without a masters (work in biotech).
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Google cancels meeting on gender controversy due to employee fears of harassment
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Investigating a ten-year-old estimate that “most social programmes don’t work”
On one hand it's great that children around the US can have life saving surgery because so many donated to their cause, on the other hand would we all be better off donating to a lobbying cause for single-payer healthcare?
If we could get that passed, every child in the US could have life saving surgery if needed and it wouldn't be a matter of whether or not their community is charitable enough.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Sorry Snapchat, it’s time to say goodbye
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Prof. of employment law: 'it may be illegal for Google to punish that engineer'
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Some Google managers maintain personal blacklists
Or insert trait here_____ Woman Gay Right-wing Omnivore Muslim
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Note to Google Employees from CEO Sundar Pichai
If they can't do that, maybe they shouldn't even have a "grown-up" job.
And to throw my 2cents in here too, I'm a biological scientist and agree with the overall theme of what the guy wrote (though there are a handful of smaller points within the manifesto that I take issue with).
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Note to Google Employees from CEO Sundar Pichai
Then in a decade you'll have a much wider pool of talent to select from and can just take the best while appeasing diversity advocates.
The same could be done for racial minorities.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Note to Google Employees from CEO Sundar Pichai
But at least own up to what you are.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Note to Google Employees from CEO Sundar Pichai
The QB is gonna get sacked (and possibly injured) because you are using metrics that don't apply to the job to judge fitness for the job.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Jeff Dean’s Lecture for YC AI [video]
I think the situations would be viewed identically. I don't know the exact processes, but lots of documentation would go into it and if the lab that gave the errant lab test has a history of poor results, they may get investigated and closed down.
If this was a one-off error, that will get chalked up to a one-off error. Even if the patient dies.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Why don't tech job listings include compensation ranges?
I don't know how much I believe this. It sounds like common-sense, but when I think about it and my own experiences this has not been the case. When last interviewing for a job, I took the lowest pay of the three offers I had. Company is small and cash-strapped and I happily signed on knowing I'm "worth more."
Further, they were looking for a more experienced dev than I, but they were lucky to afford me. Had they said, we have 10k more we were prepared to offer someone more experienced but you are not at that level. I can't see my disposition changing towards the company one iota.
Transparency makes me trust a company more, not less. I don't think I would feel more demoralized by a company for being honest with me. Additionally, how many people have walked away from salary negotiations wondering if they should have pushed for more?
On average I can't see changing the way this works being anymore demoralizing for the employee. In fact I think (on average) it would be less demoralizing and instill greater loyalty and good-will in employees.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Why don't tech job listings include compensation ranges?
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: When all job differences are accounted for, the pay gap almost disappears
So a woman in a female-dominated industry may suffer not only from their own negotiation tactics but also the negotiation tactics of most of the workers in the industry
As someone that works in the biotechnology industry, I can see a lot of corollaries. Scientists love being martyrs and there is a strong culture of "don't care about your pay - only care about the work." I could see how women could be more susceptible to this line of reasoning and/or taught to care more about "passion" than their bottom line (compared to men).
Again, lots of spitballing. Probably way off.
xxSparkleSxx | 8 years ago | on: I’ve supported myself for the past decade with my side project
1) There are lots of brilliant people in the field, but it is also the degree that dumb people who want a science degree or are "pre-med" get. It tremendously lowers the value of my undergrad degree. If you look at high-paying jobs (finance, investing, etc), you'll often find people who say they occasionally hire in a bright scientist who wants to switch industries. They typically hire physics and chemistry majors and are much less likely to hire someone with a biology degree.
2)The computational biologists/bioinformaticians/etc in this field are pretty variable in their CS skills and a good deal of the top performers leave the field because pay is really, really terrible. (ie my compensationv is 65K, high COL area, MS required, 1 year of direct experience under my belt, plus an additional 4 years of experience in the wider biotech industry - trust me I think my life is a joke too).