PHP Women

Mon, 9 Oct 2006 2:59 UTC

If you’re keeping count, you’ll know that there are seven women listed in my blogroll. These seven women are PHP programmers, and I’ve made it a point to include them in my blogroll because women are underrepresented in PHP and these women provide a much-needed voice for all female PHP developers. However, it still seems that there are very few PHP developers who are women, or perhaps, they’re just not very active in the community, which is my hunch (seeing as how there are at least four women who frequent the Atlanta PHP meetings).

Tonight, during a conversation on IRC, my good friends Ligaya Turmelle and Elizabeth Naramore resolved to change this by announcing a call for the creation of a women’s group for PHP programmers. Now, I’m not a woman, but I’m blogging about this because I think this is an important opportunity for the PHP community to reach out to the female programmers of the world and make them feel included in what has largely been a man’s industry.

So, if you’re a woman and you’re a PHP programmer or you’re just interested in the group, drop by Ligaya’s or Elizabeth’s blogs and let them know. You can also find them both in #phpc on Freenode IRC.


10 Responses to “PHP Women”

I’m a php’er and last I checked I have a pair of ovaries. I’ll check out the ladies links above. Thanks.

Comment by Sara
Mon, 9 Oct 2006 at 8:01 UTC | Permalink

Maybe we should also get user groups for different ethnicities, sexual orientation or religions..

(I personally think it doesn’t matter if you are a guy or a gal..)

Comment by Evet
Mon, 9 Oct 2006 at 21:23 UTC | Permalink

This isn’t an issue concerning lack of women PHP programmers or minority oppression or a battle of the sexes or anything like that. I think the goal here is just to call attention to those women who are PHP developers and then they can get together and talk about girl-stuff at conferences… stuff I don’t want to hear anyway ;-)

Comment by Ben Ramsey
Mon, 9 Oct 2006 at 21:40 UTC | Permalink

Yes, Evet – Ben’s right—it was certainly not meant to segregate ourselves, it’s main purpose was to just help us not feel so isolated in such a male-dominated industry, and really to gauge how many women are actually out there and programming PHP. That’s all – no feminist hard feelings or anything like that. :)

Comment by Elizabeth
Mon, 9 Oct 2006 at 22:45 UTC | Permalink

Anyone remember php-princess.net ??

Comment by Hatem
Tue, 10 Oct 2006 at 12:48 UTC | Permalink

[...] Elizabeth Narimore在她的一篇BLOG里留下了她的联系方法,呼吁PHP社区的姐妹们和她联系.而Ligaya Turmelle也写了一篇BLOG来呼唤广大的PHP女程序员在她的BLOG里冒个泡.让我比较吃惊的是,到目前为止已经有10几个女性PHP程序员在Ligaya Turmelle的Blog的留言了..其中有一个男性PHP程序员也在里面留言,提到他的blogroll里有7个女PHP程序员,他为此也写了篇BLOG – php-women. [...]

Comment by 女性PHP程序员们冒个泡 @ 陈泽|SurfChen
Tue, 10 Oct 2006 at 14:10 UTC | Permalink

Allright, allright..

I’ll take it back =)

Comment by Evert
Wed, 11 Oct 2006 at 3:51 UTC | Permalink

php-princess.net still exists. Daynah runs a blog on it now at http://daynah.php-princess.net/, but I don’t know how to get in touch with her. I bet she’d like to get in touch with Ligaya and Elizabeth, as well.

Comment by Ben Ramsey
Wed, 11 Oct 2006 at 5:15 UTC | Permalink

Ben, you can try her orkut account : http://www.orkut.com/Profile.aspx?uid=13799776511270311974 :-)

Comment by Hatem
Sat, 14 Oct 2006 at 21:31 UTC | Permalink

There was a group started about this time last year. The contact I had was another person at Oracle and I can offer the name if you’re interested.

Nothing happened with this group that I know of, and there was a slight bit of “we’re better than men” going on, so I didn’t pursue it. I don’t like that kind of thinking. Seems to defeat the point of feminism.

Comment by Alison Holloway
Mon, 18 Dec 2006 at 1:21 UTC | Permalink

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