KDE-Women Relaunched

The KDE-Women project was founded in 2001 as an international forum for women involved with or interested in KDE. It was originally intended to be a place where women could present their current contributions to KDE and where women who wished to contribute could find a starting point. That was the goal of KDE-Women then, and still is now. After a period of dormancy, the project has been relaunched in terms of a revamped website based on the new KDE design as well as fresh and updated content such as the tutorials and howto's and an article on Kontact.

In the events section you'll also find a listing of the newest events, such as the KDE Contributor's Conference 2003 currently taking place in Nove Hrady and the upcoming Informatica Feminale.

The KDE-Women are planning on adding a lot of new features and hope to find more women who want to contribute to KDE, and support the KDE-Women community. So be sure to visit the new website, and if you are a woman, feel free to join the KDE-Women community!

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Comments

by Alex (not verified)

Whew, this is a lot better than before, and a nice site to visit even fi you'r not a woman. Now where's KDE MEN ;?

I'm happy that KDE's new design is slowly but steadily being adopted by more and more KDE websites, thiugh there still are a lot of old designs, like for the Events page and Kdevelop.

by CE (not verified)

I liked the drafts on kde-look.org.
I think the old one is better than the final version.

by fault (not verified)

Keep in mind that kde.org is themeable (see settings in the top)

I really like the "Blue, Mellow" color settings.

by CE (not verified)

This design is nice, but it has some problems.
The empty line between "[...] KOffice 1.3 Beta 3 changelog." and "KDE 3.1.3 Released" is missing, for example.

Furthermore – independent to design – it is to overloaded, too much text and links.

by Anonymous (not verified)

KDevelop.org doesn't have the old but already an own design.

by Jan (not verified)

...why this is necessary. We don't have KDE men, KDE blondes,
KDE Europeans, KDE aliens, etc either.
All are working on the same project. What has this to do
with if you have breasts or not?
Don't think this is really necessary, but well if they need it...
I'm off to the gym - I want to join too.

by SHiFT (not verified)

> ...why this is necessary

for example, it is known that majority of KDE developers are men,
and i am sure most of them have girlfriends or wifes, and while the men do their job, what should their women do? Who is going to compassionate them ? -- only those of their own kind! (i.e. other women of kde men) :-)

A programmer,
often observing his girlfriend
feeling for another programmer's girlfriend.

by John (not verified)

Women are a vastly under-represented group in the geek community. If we truely want to be a community (and achieve World Domination, they do make up 52% of the population you know) then we need to provide support to encourage then into the community, not chase them away with macho bullshit.

Besides, the 3 best programmers I have ever had the privalege to work with were women, they kicked my arse all over the joint. They brought a different perspective to the table, and just got on with it while we guys were still comparing our measuring tapes :-)

John.

by Slovin (not verified)

Yes, I think us aliens of the uncharted left arm of the milky way demand attention! :-)

by anon (not verified)

> with if you have breasts or not?

Of course it doesn't matter, but we need to encourge more women to get involved with contributing to open src software :)

Presently, I would guess more than 95% of all KDE contributors are men.
See http://tinyurl.com/l6ar

by a.c. (not verified)

.why this is necessary. We don't have KDE men, KDE blondes,
KDE Europeans, KDE aliens, etc either.

If you like, you can probably start men.kde.org.

by frizzo (not verified)

Screenshots please

by Not so anonymous... (not verified)

Of what? Women? :P

by Marc Tespe (not verified)

*LOL* *LOL* *LOL*

by anonymoose (not verified)

Whoa... hot CS women. *packs bags for Germany*

by Slovin (not verified)

I agree that KDE-Women is an unnecessary component. It gives the impression that "women" are a special group of people with special needs when it comes to KDE. Well, they're not. We don't need segregation in KDE. Thank you.

by Tom (not verified)

I agree that *in theory* it is an unecessary component. We shouldn't need to discriminate at all, not even positively. But the fact remains that there are very few women involved in KDE. There are many reasons for this, and none reflect poorly on the way that KDE welcomes contributions from women, but any initiative that can encourage women to actively contribute is worthwhile.

Why do we want more women participating? Well, KDE reflects the needs of its users, or rather the needs of the users that express their needs on bugzilla. If you don't have any women participating, from using bugzilla to coding DCOP, KDE will become increasingly male orientated and male dominated. That's not to say that women somehow how very different needs or tastes, but that you are excluding a large number of users, because you aren't making an effort to include them.

So promoting participation to women is a good thing, IMO. If there comes a time when we notice that there are very few elderly people using KDE, then it'd be a good idea to promote KDE to the elderly, concentrating on particular benefits they might find in KDE the product and KDE the community. And so on.

To me, Free Software is about *providing Freedom* to users, not just satisfying my own wants and building cool technology.

by anon (not verified)

> It gives the impression that "women" are a special group of people with special needs when it comes to KDE.

It has nothing to do with "segregration". What's wrong with encouraging one of the most underepresented minorities in KDE development from contributing?

Women as percentage of World's Population - 51.72% - (Dec 2001)
Women as percentage of KDE's contributor Population (less than 5%, conservative estimate)

It's important to encourage women to help out in KDE development. If women had not been encouraged in other fields, we would have seen even more male-domination in the world than we have now.

by AC (not verified)

>>It's important to encourage women to help out in KDE development.

Look, if _people_ are interested in KDE, they will help and contribute, there is nothing more or less to it.

by Rayiner Hashem (not verified)

That's bullshit. Its simple mathematics to wor out why initiatives like this are needed. Consider the X-axis to be time, and the Y-axis to be a particular gender's involvement with technology. If women start out lower on the Y-axis (and they do, because of various historical and social reasons), and the slope of the two lines is the same (implying equal rate of progress for both genders as a result of neutrality) they will *always* be behind. The only way to get women to catch up is by increasing their rate of progress, and outreach efforts like this can do that.

PS> I used to be in a robotics club in high school. We sometimes did technology events for the kids in the area. We'd line up some programmable Lego robots and watch the kids come in and play with them. I noticed then that the 8-12 year olds that came in were pretty much evenly divided among girls and boys. Meanwhile, our robotics club was all guys, and at my college (an engineering school) a full 72% of the students are guys. There is definately a terrible social phenomenon at work here --- there is no point in going all "ivory-tower" and pretending its not there.

PS2> Now the above mathematical metaphor does not hold if gender inequality is a self-correcting phenomenon. That is, in the abscence of external force, it reachs some equilibrium. There is no reason to believe that it is, and lots of reasons to believe that it isn't. Gender inequality is a lot like financial inequality in that the rate of change is proportional to the current level. This can be easily seen in economic statistics, which show that the gap between the rich and poor keeps getting larger, even in a theoretically neutral system like capitalism. The same probably applies to gender equality.

by azza-bazoo (not verified)

Double posts aside, it's worth pointing out that countless studies have confirmed exactly what you observed in your robotics clubs -- there are real social factors at play which are disencouraging girls from science/engineering.

IMHO, seeing the KDE community (well, some of it) actually *doing something* about this is a big part of what makes KDE, as a whole, so very cool.

by Rayiner Hashem (not verified)

That's bullshit. Its simple mathematics to wor out why initiatives like this are needed. Consider the X-axis to be time, and the Y-axis to be a particular gender's involvement with technology. If women start out lower on the Y-axis (and they do, because of various historical and social reasons), and the slope of the two lines is the same (implying equal rate of progress for both genders as a result of neutrality) they will *always* be behind. The only way to get women to catch up is by increasing their rate of progress, and outreach efforts like this can do that.

PS> I used to be in a robotics club in high school. We sometimes did technology events for the kids in the area. We'd line up some programmable Lego robots and watch the kids come in and play with them. I noticed then that the 8-12 year olds that came in were pretty much evenly divided among girls and boys. Meanwhile, our robotics club was all guys, and at my college (an engineering school) a full 72% of the students are guys. There is definately a terrible social phenomenon at work here --- there is no point in going all "ivory-tower" and pretending its not there.

PS2> Now the above mathematical metaphor does not hold if gender inequality is a self-correcting phenomenon. That is, in the abscence of external force, it reachs some equilibrium. There is no reason to believe that it is, and lots of reasons to believe that it isn't. Gender inequality is a lot like financial inequality in that the rate of change is proportional to the current level. This can be easily seen in economic statistics, which show that the gap between the rich and poor keeps getting larger, even in a theoretically neutral system like capitalism. The same probably applies to gender equality.

by frizzo (not verified)

???

by Anonymous (not verified)

Yep, noticed the magen David too... probably an slip, since the outfit of the lizardess is more pagan than haredi, but yet...

by AC (not verified)

You talking about the thing around her neck?

I think it's supposed to be a KDE gear. :-)

by ANON (not verified)

Wow, that's awesome. Is there anywhere to buy KDE gear necklaces?

by AC (not verified)

I don't know. What I'm wondering is... if dragons wear clothing, why is Konqui naked?

by AC (not verified)

It reminds me of the smurfs. 'de smurfen'

All these male smurfs and one female smurf, its just as silly as this whole KDE woman thing. If there is such a thing as a nerd factor, this would top the scale.

by Anonymous (not verified)

Buy a star of David and flat the edges a little :)

by Wurzelgeist (not verified)

it will be more active than in the past. Yes, KDE Women is a nice project.

by AC (not verified)

All I want to say is: some KDE people are really really silly.

If there is anything showing immaturity and utter geekmanifest in KDE, its nerds settings up a KDE woman corner. Go ahead, visit KDE woman and share your woman things there.. and when you have something, contact some KDE 'men'.

Consider this a bug report for some of my 'fellow' KDE 'men'.

by AC (not verified)

>>its nerds settings up a KDE woman corner<<

Obviously this has been set up by women (who also happen to be nerds, of course :).

by Bojan (not verified)

Why does every news about KDE women trigger a debate if this is necessary or not? It doesn't matter if it is necessary or not, it is already there. Obviously someone thought it's necessary.

by AC (not verified)

erm, im going to start a Satanic, Racist KDE hate group, we need it.

by Bojan (not verified)

If you sincerely feel it is necessary, then do it.

by AC (not verified)

Primary target: Bojan ;)

by Alain (not verified)

Funny that (almost ?) only men discuss if women should have their area.

by Roberto Alsina (not verified)

Well... there are not enough women around to have an argument!

by Anke (not verified)

You don't have to discuss whether women should have their area - we already have it!

by AC (not verified)

Discussion closed - lol

by Joe (not verified)

Yes, so let's just drop it?
I'm a man, and if this gets more people involved, great.
If it makes some women who help out feel better represented, great.

There is no down side, so just drop it.

by Bojan (not verified)

> Primary target: Bojan ;)

LOL

by Anonymous (not verified)

I misses to mention that there are also KNewsticker and KNode modules.

by Amara (not verified)

Does anyone have a link, or other evidence that this seeming divide of the community encourages more women to get involved? Any statistics?

IMO, it seemed that the aims of the FSF and projects like this are not only to develop great software, but also create a community, a united community. Not one where certain members belong to women.kde.org and certain members belong to asians.kde.org, russians.kde.org, pinksocks.kde.org and the rest go to community.kde.org.

I also don't see how this is much different from developer.kde.org. Apart from the sparse uses of the word "women" in a few places, theres no male-oriented content in developer.kde.org to make such a difference. Unless of course, women.kde.org exists just to make women developers feel better and "separated" from the rest of the "male macho" community, in which case its nothing serious and is fine.

Anyway, any evidence would be appreciated, I really am curious. :)