Blogroll
Review: Verizon's LG Spectrum offers speed, long life -- and weird UI customization
Embedded PC moves up to Cedar Trail chips
Using the Center for Internet Security (CIS) Benchmarks to Support an Information Security Management System
Category: ISO-17799
Paper Added: January 25, 2013
How to identify malicious HTTP Requests
Category: Intrusion Detection
Paper Added: January 21, 2013
Using Teambuilding to Improve Performance for Geographically Distributed Information Security Professionals
Category: Management & Leadership
Paper Added: January 21, 2013
Phishing Detecton and Remediation
Category: Email Issues
Paper Added: January 21, 2013
Using Watermarks to Prevent Leaks
Category: Intrusion Detection
Paper Added: January 21, 2013
Security of Mobile Banking and Payments
Category: eCommerce
Paper Added: January 8, 2013
Visual Studio Talk Show : Conférence BUILD et Windows 8 !
//Build/ Windows 8 : Quid du développeur … WinRT, Win32 ou .NET ?
//Build/ Windows 8 : Toutes les vidéos des sessions sur Channel 9 !
//Build/ Windows 8 : Téléchargez le Live SDK Developer Preview !
//Build/ Windows 8 : Téléchargez Windows 8 Developer Preview !
//Build/ Windows 8 : Microsoft galope sur le chemin de l’évolution et non de la révolution !
//Build/ Windows … un embargo qui doit tenir ses promesses : Windows 8, vNext Visual Studio, .NET 4.5, Cloud, XAML, … ?!?
WPC 2011– Keynote D1 : Windows, Windows, Windows !!! ©Steve Ballmer
WPC 2011– Keynote D1 : Bing Maps prêt pour l’exploitation de l’intelligence collective !
A Call to Action for Women Programmers
In the two short years since its inception, Random Hacks of Kindness has grown into a diverse global community of experts and volunteer technologists putting their skills to work for the greater good. An important part of that diversity is the significant number of women programmers who have come out to RHoK events to hack for humanity. Women have traditionally been underrepresented in the global software development community. Here at RHoK, we are aiming to better the statistics.
A map showing RHOK #2 participation globally with circle size indicating total attendance and circle color indicating percentage of women attending.
Green: >=20%, Yellow: between 10 and 20%, Red: <=10%.
At last year’s Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, the Open Source for Good panel (including Avni Khatri and Alice Bonhomme-Biais from RHoK founding partners Yahoo! and Google) threw down a challenge: to ensure that women made up 20% of all participants at RHoK #2.
The challenge made an impact. RHoK locations in Chicago, New York, Boston and Seattle, and Lusaka, Zambia all had close to 30% female participation, with 17% of participants globally being women, and many women acting as lead organizers.
“We didn’t just hit 20% challenge of women participants, we leapt over it,” said Chicago attendee Natalia Vinnick, Yahoo!, on the YDN blog. “It was great to see so many women who participated and women who won!”
“I found out about RHoK from a friend who participated in RHoK #1 and recommended it to me, since I am passionate about humanitarian causes,” said Eugenia Gabrilova, a member of the winning team in Chicago. “I hope more women learn that a career in tech isn’t about sitting in a corner coding—you can accomplish so much and interact with many cool people.”
Yahoo! took the 20% challenge one step further, funding a scholarship for a female student to travel to RHoK #2’s Chicago Mainstage event.
“I have always hoped that my education will help me in building tools that will have social outreach—tools that will benefit others across any boundaries,” wrote scholarship winner Malveeka Tewari, a graduate computer science student at UCSD in her winning essay about hacking for humanity.
Nairobi RHoK attendees included members of the AkiraChix team. The AkiraChix “are a group of intelligent and energetic ladies yearning to empower women through the use of technology in our day-to-day lives and change the cliché that IT is for men,” said Jamila Abass and Judith Owigar. Their team learned about RHoK through Nairobi’s innovation hub and RHoK’s Nairobi venue, the iHub.
“Currently there are few women in technology here in Kenya. Even fewer involved in software development. We as AkiraChix would like to change that,” said Jamila Abass and Judith Owigar. “We would like to see more women using technology to enrich their lives and creating relevant applications. Since these women are an untapped resource who knows what new applications they could create? The bottom line is by getting more women involved in technology we get a greater variety of ideas and applications, all of which are for the benefit of all people who will interact with these applications.”
With RHoK #3 fast approaching, RHoK is sending out a call to action to lady hackers around the globe: we invite you to take RHoK by storm! Register here to join us in hacking for humanity on June 4th and 5th.