Monday, February 4, 2008

Death and the inequities of the technology industry

Yesterday, Boston Globe reported that the death of Jeanette Symons on Friday. A pilot who has flown for over 20 years, Jeanette and her son sadly perished in a crash from Maine.

To many who work in the technology industry, this was a great loss to us. Jeanette was CTO and VP of Engineering for Zhone Technology. Prior to that, she was the CTO, EVP and co-founder of Ascend Communications, a leading provider of WAN solutions. For many women who work in the technology industry, she was considered an inspiration for many a GirlGeeks.

Her death also highlighted for me in many ways, an unchanging nature of the technology industry. No where on the major technology blogs, with the exception of a small snarky blurb on ValleyWag, was her death covered. She had made significant contributions to this industry and yet, why so little coverage of the loss of such a talented individual? If this was the death of a male entrepreneur of a similar contribution and background, this would have been in all the major technology blogs.

This saddens me greatly. I've been working in this industry since 1994 (even before graduating UCSD) and it would seem so little has changed for women working in this industry. Despite of Carley, Meg and others who have led major companies, women still seem to be second class citizens in the industry we helped to build.

That's how I'm feeling. If you disagree with me, please comment or write me an email.

1 comments:

STAQ said...

I worked with Jeanette at Ascend. I was not at the company long and i only met her briefly, but I thought it was so cool that our CTO was a woman which was one of the reasons I came to work there.

I got out of tech officially last year. It took me awhile, because I kept holding onto hope that things would change for women working in tech, but alas my patience wore out.

I am REALLY pissed off about this news about Jeanette like you. This woman was a MAJOR figure in tech and not just because she was a woman but because she created several companies that did well. It is such a disgrace that her death and memory is not getting the coverage she deserves. CNET did post something on one of their blogs, but why did it not make the front page news? I'm just shaking my head. It's truly a sad example of the inequality that men & women get in tech news coverage.