
Breaking the 20%
Before computers were machines, they were women! For a span of two centuries the term "computer" was effectively interchangeable with a woman tasked with the role of a human calculator, adept at solving intricate mathematical problems. Then World War II started and men decided to build computers. Despite their zeal to build the machines, they had no interest in programming them, so they left the job to the women. Women, under the leadership of figures like Grace Hopper, played a pivotal role in shaping the burgeoning industry. And then, in 1984, everything changed. Women exited and the men became the programmers, the software engineers, and the "rock stars" of the digital epoch. Today merely 20% of IT degrees are being awarded to women. In this podcast with the help of my wonderful guests, we delve into the chronicles of these forgotten women, the trailblazers who guided us into the digital era.
This podcast explores the amazing lives of women who pioneered the early years, and why the women left. We also talk about the women who are proving today that we can still make it, we can still lead the industry. And finally, we try to find the magic formula to break the 20% and bring back the women.
But that’s not all! Our Breakroom segment, co-hosted with Michalis, offers a fresh, irreverent take on the latest news from the tech and startup worlds. Instead of glorifying the industry, we gossip, roast tech billionaires, and critique our favorite (and not-so-favorite) tech services and products. It’s a fun, unfiltered, and informal dive into the quirks and controversies of the tech world.
Whether you’re here for the history, the inspiration, or the gossip, Breaking the 20% has something for everyone who cares about the past, present, and future of women in tech.
Breaking the 20%
How to Hire "Miss Software" (and Other Awful Advice from the Mad Men Era)
In this episode of Breaking the 20%, we crack open the archives of early computing magazines from the 1960s and 70s — a time when keypunch girls were IN, lipstickless coders were OUT, and “dumb blondes” were considered the ideal user interface.
Join us as we explore the casual sexism, absurd hiring practices, and thinly veiled innuendo that shaped tech culture before the word “programmer” even sounded like a real job. From Susie Meyer learning PL/I to optical readers bragging they don’t take maternity leave, this is a tour through the cocktail-soaked, bias-ridden origins of the industry we call home.
Spoiler alert: The worst hiring advice from 1962 still feels a little too familiar today.
You can find the links to all the ads & article we comment on here: https://breaking20.eu/posts/sexist-ads/
more episodes at https://breaking20.eu/