Posts Tagged ‘technology’

Women’s wisdom comes back around

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

By Michelle Lang

If you’ve ever heard the lyrics to Brad Paisley’s “Letter to Me”, you know that the country crooner made a song of taking his adult wisdom and imparting it on his 17-year-old self, reminding him not to bother arguing with his dad, to enjoy the adventure of his date with Bridget, and to thank his teacher for spending time with him.

The same concept is done daily by parents telling their kids, “Back when I was your age…”

Now, in honor of Women’s History Month, the Science Club for Girls is embracing the same concept; they’ve asked bright women leaders in science, engineering and technology careers to write “a letter to my young self.” What’s the point? To inspire young would-be scientists, highlight women in STEM, challenge the “geek” stereotype of those in science and enlighten people about the number of science careers available.

What interests us is that several of the Mass High Tech 2009 Women to Watch honorees have written a letter to their young selves.

Anna Mracek Dietrich, chief operating officer of Terrafugia Inc., wrote to herself, “You always regret the things you don’t do more than the things you do” (within boundaries of legality and logic).

Intel lead technologist Mondira Pant advised her 15-year-old self to “enjoy your present, welcome your doubts but don’t be afraid.”

Ronnie Maffa, Director of Social Software Product Development at IBM Corp., told her young self on the edge of possibly taking on a new project: “Be prepared that you may not be chosen. More importantly, be prepared that you will be chosen. Either way, you would have strengthened your position and preparedness for the future.”

The letters are another attempt to get science in front of girls and women. You might wonder just how many of these groups we need. After all, we’ve got the Science Club for Girls, Society of Women Engineers, the Association for Women in Science — and that’s just with a quick Google search. But it comes down to peer pressure. Just as friends, family and neighbors can sway one to a life of drugs, enough women leading interesting lives and careers in science may sway others to embrace science and technology.

So that’s our strategy too. Mass High Tech is peer pressuring girls and encouraging women leaders in science with our annual Women to Watch event on Friday, March 19, and our special report, coming out March 17, dedicated to this year’s crop of inspirational women in tech. By now, we’ve talked to our 11 new women honorees, interviewing them on their early influences, challenges and accomplishments, and they’re shaping up to be another group of go-getters. To hear what the women have to say, join us for breakfast on March 19.

Do you bike to work? High-tech style?

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Last week, Beth Israel CIO and prolific blogger John Halamka, wrote about his monthlong experience biking to work and from meeting to meeting.

It prompted me (and many other readers, I’m sure) to think about trying it myself — after all, the economics are obvious, and the health benefits are a bonus you can’t deny. He wrote, “The bottomline – using a bike to commute in Boston saves me 30 minutes per day, saves gas, saves parking, and burns calories. If the rain stops, the pedestrians get off the phone, and the potholes are filled, life will be grand. The experiment has been a success and I will continue to bike to all my meetings in Boston, April to November, weather permitting.”

It also reminded me of the many entrepreneurs and inventors who ride their bike to work, particularly clean tech entrepreneur and bicycle innovator David Wilson, who was 80 years old when we profiled him last year and who was riding the recumbent bicycle he designed to work in Woburn.

And then, of course, there are the bicycle innovations that keep cropping up around here. Just last week, Managing Editor Jim Connolly included Global Cycle Solutions in a wrapup of emerging technologies. Global Cycle Solutions is building bicycle-powered peripherals such as a corn sheller, a grain grinder and a cell phone charger for use in developing nations. The company says its mission is “to leverage a worldwide market of over 1 billion bicycles as a driver of innovation and affordable energy. We hope to enable micro-entrepreneurs to bring the service of pedal-powered devices to their communities to meet an extensive range of needs from agricultural food processing to home appliances to battery charging.”

And who can forget BikeNow, which proposes a fleet of rental bikes in Boston? Bikenow is an automated bicycle-share program for the Boston area, which it positions as a Zipcar Inc.-style service for bikes.

Virtual biking also popped up earlier this week, as some local firms help Pan Mass Challenge raise funds using virtual bikers. The web-based fundraising application built by two Massachusetts companies is using a virtual-goods model to expand the Pan Mass Challenge’s fundraising horizons. The application, called PaceLine, lets donors create online avatars that join a rider’s fundraising campaign on a tandem bicycle with an infinite number of seats. Each donor can then start his or her own PaceLine page, inviting friends to add to their contribution. The avatars display each donor’s reason for giving using a pop-up text field and icons.

I’m sure there are other stories out there we haven’t hit upon. Do you take your bike to work every day in some unique way? Know of someone who does? Or is there some cycling innovation we haven’t covered? Let us know by commenting below.

-Doug Banks, Editor

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