Beautiful, Eric. What a great message: rejecting fear of code.

At a very (very, like 1995 or earlier) early women in tech group meeting that I attended, one woman talked about fear of code. She described code as being inherently a simple, logical set of rules to follow, and illustrated it with:

"... first pants, then socks, then shoes. But never shoes, then socks; or shoes, then pants." Everyone in the audience breathed a sigh of relief.

kc

On 12/6/12 9:27 AM, Eric Hellman wrote:
On Tuesday Night I went the the NYTech Meetup. They get 800+ people to come once a month 
to watch demos of the latest thing. One of the presentations was from "Hackers 
Union". I was cringing because it was like a caricature of how to present an 
uninviting impression to anyone who wasn't white, male and 20-something. Complete with 
jokes about how to pick up girls in bars. In front of an audience about 30% non-male, 40% 
non-white, and 50% non-20-something.

I thought to myself, if they did that at Code4Lib, it would NOT be received 
well, to say the least.

And this morning I happened to scan through many of the recent threads on the 
listserv.

And the thread on what is coding, including the existential digressions.

What makes Code4Lib different from any other group I know of in the library 
world is that it rejects fear of code. Much of the library world fears code, 
and most of that fear is unfounded. And the code we need to fear is not so 
scary once we know how to fear it.

The threads about having anti-harassment policies is a good thing because we 
want to remove fear that surrounds code. Talking about it is a big step towards 
addressing fear. Let's try to make sure that having a policy doesn't stop us 
from talking about the need to eliminate the fear.

As to who is a part of the Code4Lib community, I think you don't have to be a 
"coder", you just have to reject fear of code. A big part of the conferences is 
creating space to help people make the transition from being oppressed by fear of code to 
being liberated by the possibilities of code.

OK, back to work for me- unfortunately not the code part.

Eric


Eric Hellman
President, Gluejar.Inc.
Founder, Unglue.it https://unglue.it/
http://go-to-hellman.blogspot.com/
twitter: @gluejar

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Karen Coyle
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