Out of curiosity -- are you guys aware of startups out there that have a female co-founder? I'm aware of TipJoy (http://www.tipjoy.com), but no others.
Also, anybody around here have a female co-founder on their team? If you ARE the female co-founder, I'm not asking you to reveal your gender, I'm just curious about whether there are other teams floating around with women in them.
We have a female co-founder -- in fact, she is actually the one that hatched our initial idea. But our product's demographic seems to be more women than men, as well.
Is it really that different from anywhere else? Female CEOs are pretty rare everywhere, no matter what field. And they have the disadvantage that, most girls don't grow up to want to be CEOs of computer companies, they grow up wanting to be CEOs of fashion magazines
Exactly. Fact is, there are more men interested in computer science than women. In my year at uni, of a starting cohort of 120, around 15 were women.
I know it's not politically correct to say, but maybe men generally have more aptitude for the subject. Larry Summers, former president of Harvard was fired for saying this a few years ago. Camille Paglia, or some one else said "There are few female geniuses for the same reason there are few female serial killers."
I hate articles that whine about female or ethnic under-representation in any field. Here in Jamaica, 80% of uni grads are women. Yet no one complains that men are under-represented.
"Google and Hewlett-Packard are examples of companies that generally do a good job of supporting and promoting women managers, according to Beecham and others. There are smaller companies and start-ups run by women, as well."
This is what I dislike the most. No one should be promoted because they are a woman. The best person for the job should get it, period. And women should be careful that they are promoted but not respected, like some of the 'token' black people at some firms. And from what I've seen, real geeks tend to be very meritocratic. Promotion based on gender can only cause problems. and these problems will seethe, because no one who wants to keep their job is gonna protest it.
Logically, if we hold that women and men are equal, and both equal under the law, then it should not be a big deal if a female CEO leaves, or if the number of female CEOs in a particular field is low.
| ...but maybe men generally have more aptitude for the subject.
Maybe, but there is also a lot of subtle social conditioning that tells girls and young women that there are gender-specific subjects and roles. (Likewise for guys, too.)
| "There are few female geniuses for the same reason there are few female serial killers."
You have to be careful about differentiating between innate or potential genius, and expressed genius. There could be a lot of very smart women out there that aren't getting noticed.
Creativity, scientific (or field) achievement, and corporate ladder-climbing has been correlated to testosterone in men. I wonder if there'd be a similar correlation among women?
The more interesting analysis is why do girls want to be CEOs of fashion mags rather than computer companies? At what age do they make this choice, why? Does it carry across different cultures? etc
Simple. Girls are different from boys. Regardless of what we've been told that male/female differences are simply matter of socialization, men and women are different.
Let us reason together:
If you believe in God (at least the Christian God, as I do), then you accept that men and women are different, with different social roles.
But even if you believe in evolution, why would the species have physically different members. Evolution teaches that those more suited to reproduction survive. What's more reproductively efficient than binary fission?
Men and women are intrinsically different. It's as simple as that.
I don't believe there is an accurate way to compile a list like that unless private co's like Ning(or Xobni or Loopt) disclose revenues or employee numbers or users or whatever your differentiating factor is to be considered one of the 'valley's 150 biggest corporations'.
In this case, siliconvalley.com [http://www.siliconvalley.com/sv150/ci_8893849] acknowledges the biggest 150 companies as Public companies which would mean Ning does not fall into that category.
Although I do consider Ning to be a "top tech firm" in the valley.
I personally use Ning to spawn my own social networks, and since it is fairly easy to use it's rss feeds as a form of Content Management I see it's value.
I'm inclined to agree, but then you have to say things like "Take Andreessen away from OpsWare and it's just a datacenter company" and "Take Andreessen away from Netscape and it's just a browser company". It's kind of hard to argue with the success he's had - maybe he had something to do with it.
I have reached that conclusion based on the fact that there is no mention of Massachusetts law in their terms of service and their Postal address is in Palo Alto.
Also, anybody around here have a female co-founder on their team? If you ARE the female co-founder, I'm not asking you to reveal your gender, I'm just curious about whether there are other teams floating around with women in them.
We have a female co-founder -- in fact, she is actually the one that hatched our initial idea. But our product's demographic seems to be more women than men, as well.