Yes I know. I used to hardly program at all and get the credit for three projects. It was silly, I went to lots of meetings and people said how cool it was to see women in engineering. Now I'm a consultant so I get to actually do the work. I like it a lot better.
That's funny, if that's the case, I offered a minor code change on a project once, and I now wonder if I should claim credit for those projects.
Women are still quite rare in engineering, the local university didn't even have a woman's washroom in the engineering wing until relatively recently, and is a clear afterthought. Then, with the few women, they tend to get special treatment seemingly because someone in the company thinks of them as something of unicorns or something.
Funny in the notes, the main code contributions look like font and colors, aka presentation over the functionality of the code.
Yes I know. I used to hardly program at all and get the credit for three projects. It was silly, I went to lots of meetings and people said how cool it was to see women in engineering. Now I'm a consultant so I get to actually do the work. I like it a lot better.
That's funny, if that's the case, I offered a minor code change on a project once, and I now wonder if I should claim credit for those projects.
Women are still quite rare in engineering, the local university didn't even have a woman's washroom in the engineering wing until relatively recently, and is a clear afterthought. Then, with the few women, they tend to get special treatment seemingly because someone in the company thinks of them as something of unicorns or something.