Search a title or topic

Over 20 million podcasts, powered by 

Player FM logo
Artwork

Content provided by George Stocker. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by George Stocker or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Remembering the women of École Polytechnique

12:38
 
Share
 

Manage episode 302805659 series 2984906
Content provided by George Stocker. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by George Stocker or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Normally I'd start this out with some of the funnier things that happened; but before I dive into what happened last week, I want to talk about this week.

Warning: death and violence follow.
Yesterday was the 31st anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre. If you're not familiar with this atrocity, let me quote Deb Chachra's chilling telling of the event:

On December 6, 1989, in late afternoon a man had walked into the École Polytechnique, the engineering school of the University of Montreal, carrying a hunting rifle, ammunition, and a knife. He entered a mechanical engineering class of about sixty students, separated out the nine women, and told them, "I am fighting feminism." One of the women, Nathalie Provost, responded, "Look, we are just women studying engineering, not necessarily feminists ready to march on the streets to shout we are against men, just students intent on leading a normal life." She reports that his response was, "You're women, you're going to be engineers. You're all a bunch of feminists. I hate feminists."

He then opened fire on the women, killing six of them. Then he went from floor to floor in the building, targeting and shooting women.

Fourteen women were killed that day, twelve of them engineering students, one a nursing student, and one a university employee.
Here are their names: Anne St-Arneault, Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Nathalie Crotea, Barbara Daigneault, Anne-Marie Edward, Maud Haviernick, Barbara Klueznick, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Anne-Marie Lemay, Sonia Pelletier, Michèle Richard, and Annie Turcotte. (Me: You can hear more about these women here.)

An additional thirteen people were injured. Nathalie Provost was shot four times, but survived. In the weeks, months, and years that followed, among other responses, Canada implemented stricter gun-control regulations, and began to observe December 6th as a National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. The event remains the worst mass murder in Canadian history.

Our industry has problems with sexism, whether latent or outright. While we hope never to have another atrocity like this one; we should strive for equality and justice in our industry. As a white dude in tech, I'll do everything I can; and I ask you to do the same. If you've never had to fear for your life just because you wanted to be an engineer, then you too need to stand up and help stop the sexism in our industry.
Now, on to what happened last week in the world of .NET.
😁 Christina Warren (@film_girl on twitter) submitted a feature request for Windows Terminal to include a "Stories" feature. It was closed far too quickly, in my option, and we all know how hard it is for Microsoft to design a terminal. This would be a nice way to include video tips about the terminal in the terminal itself. What could go wrong?
📝 If you're the type of developer that has a need to monitor the Garbage Collector, you should read about the newly updated in .NET 5 GC.GetGCMemoryInfo API from Maoni Stephens. We're all in the boat where we don't want to deal with the Garbage Collector until we need to deal with the garbage collector, so read this post, and save it for a rainy day.
📝 Code-Maze continues their blazor series with a post on one-way and two-way binding in blazor applications. I maintain that two-way binding is evil and should be avoided at all costs. Think I'm wrong? Yell at me on Twitter @gortok.
📝 How to Unit Test in Entity Framework Core 5 by Michal Bialecki. My preferred answer is: "Don't unit test persistence". Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
🎥 The Visual Studio team livecasted a Remote office Hours talking about the future architectural changes being made to Visual Studio Visual Studio is older than most college seniors these days, and it's spectacular to see it still alive and kicking. It is probably the best in class IDE I've ever used, and probably the nicest product Microsoft has ever developed for a technical audience.
🆕 MVVM Toolkit Preview 3 has been released. Deeper dive into this is that Michael, the author of this blog post, deep dives into the API. I'm not quite sure what the MVVM Toolkit is for; it looks like some sort of platform-independent MVVM library. Special thanks to Dee Dee Walsh, @ddskier on twitter for the link.
👍 There's an open feature request to get IDE support for Preprocessor symbols. YES. PLEASE. That is far better than the current state of: "What did we name that IFDEF? I don't know. Guess I'll just guess and have a timebomb waiting to blow up in my face."
🔊 Paul Sheriff talks about what's new in .NET 5 on the Azure DevOps podcast. I checked, and they did start this podcast after TFS was renamed to Azure DevOps. I hope they're comfortable with change because the name "Azure DevOps" reminds me of 70s disco. It's cute but it's gonna get old fast.
📝 Kalid Abuhakmeh talks about Module Initialization in C# 9. If, like me, you have no idea what this is, you can probably skip it. But if your team bandies about "Secure coding" and "Threat Model" as terms of art, you may want to read this post. Basically it gives you a way of loading environment variables or code before your your code gets run.
🧪 Microsoft is testing Windows Feature Experiance Pack updates with Windows Insiders. The Windows Feature Experience Pack, so named because Microsoft's Marketing department has a minimum character limit quota; includes improvements to windows. In this case, an updated Snipping tool, text input panel, and a suggestion feature for the windows shell. According to this article, Microsoft wants to make future improvements to the.... Feature experience (Sorry not sorry) available through this... pack. If you are A Windows Insider, let me know how you like these updates.
📰 Microsoft Teams adds support for answering calls via Apple Carplay, transferring calls between mobile and desktop, and adding call recordings to onedrive. Oh for fucks sake. Instead of someone saying "You know what? Enough is enough. This "Work from anywhere while you're doing anything is nucking futz and we aren't going to do it any more. The eight-hour workday is hereby abolished for a four-hour workday that you'll actually be able to make it through and still get things done. I've never seen technology workers productive for an entire 8 hour day; and it's about time we stop pretending that they will be.
🎥

  continue reading

63 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 302805659 series 2984906
Content provided by George Stocker. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by George Stocker or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Normally I'd start this out with some of the funnier things that happened; but before I dive into what happened last week, I want to talk about this week.

Warning: death and violence follow.
Yesterday was the 31st anniversary of the École Polytechnique massacre. If you're not familiar with this atrocity, let me quote Deb Chachra's chilling telling of the event:

On December 6, 1989, in late afternoon a man had walked into the École Polytechnique, the engineering school of the University of Montreal, carrying a hunting rifle, ammunition, and a knife. He entered a mechanical engineering class of about sixty students, separated out the nine women, and told them, "I am fighting feminism." One of the women, Nathalie Provost, responded, "Look, we are just women studying engineering, not necessarily feminists ready to march on the streets to shout we are against men, just students intent on leading a normal life." She reports that his response was, "You're women, you're going to be engineers. You're all a bunch of feminists. I hate feminists."

He then opened fire on the women, killing six of them. Then he went from floor to floor in the building, targeting and shooting women.

Fourteen women were killed that day, twelve of them engineering students, one a nursing student, and one a university employee.
Here are their names: Anne St-Arneault, Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Nathalie Crotea, Barbara Daigneault, Anne-Marie Edward, Maud Haviernick, Barbara Klueznick, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Anne-Marie Lemay, Sonia Pelletier, Michèle Richard, and Annie Turcotte. (Me: You can hear more about these women here.)

An additional thirteen people were injured. Nathalie Provost was shot four times, but survived. In the weeks, months, and years that followed, among other responses, Canada implemented stricter gun-control regulations, and began to observe December 6th as a National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. The event remains the worst mass murder in Canadian history.

Our industry has problems with sexism, whether latent or outright. While we hope never to have another atrocity like this one; we should strive for equality and justice in our industry. As a white dude in tech, I'll do everything I can; and I ask you to do the same. If you've never had to fear for your life just because you wanted to be an engineer, then you too need to stand up and help stop the sexism in our industry.
Now, on to what happened last week in the world of .NET.
😁 Christina Warren (@film_girl on twitter) submitted a feature request for Windows Terminal to include a "Stories" feature. It was closed far too quickly, in my option, and we all know how hard it is for Microsoft to design a terminal. This would be a nice way to include video tips about the terminal in the terminal itself. What could go wrong?
📝 If you're the type of developer that has a need to monitor the Garbage Collector, you should read about the newly updated in .NET 5 GC.GetGCMemoryInfo API from Maoni Stephens. We're all in the boat where we don't want to deal with the Garbage Collector until we need to deal with the garbage collector, so read this post, and save it for a rainy day.
📝 Code-Maze continues their blazor series with a post on one-way and two-way binding in blazor applications. I maintain that two-way binding is evil and should be avoided at all costs. Think I'm wrong? Yell at me on Twitter @gortok.
📝 How to Unit Test in Entity Framework Core 5 by Michal Bialecki. My preferred answer is: "Don't unit test persistence". Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
🎥 The Visual Studio team livecasted a Remote office Hours talking about the future architectural changes being made to Visual Studio Visual Studio is older than most college seniors these days, and it's spectacular to see it still alive and kicking. It is probably the best in class IDE I've ever used, and probably the nicest product Microsoft has ever developed for a technical audience.
🆕 MVVM Toolkit Preview 3 has been released. Deeper dive into this is that Michael, the author of this blog post, deep dives into the API. I'm not quite sure what the MVVM Toolkit is for; it looks like some sort of platform-independent MVVM library. Special thanks to Dee Dee Walsh, @ddskier on twitter for the link.
👍 There's an open feature request to get IDE support for Preprocessor symbols. YES. PLEASE. That is far better than the current state of: "What did we name that IFDEF? I don't know. Guess I'll just guess and have a timebomb waiting to blow up in my face."
🔊 Paul Sheriff talks about what's new in .NET 5 on the Azure DevOps podcast. I checked, and they did start this podcast after TFS was renamed to Azure DevOps. I hope they're comfortable with change because the name "Azure DevOps" reminds me of 70s disco. It's cute but it's gonna get old fast.
📝 Kalid Abuhakmeh talks about Module Initialization in C# 9. If, like me, you have no idea what this is, you can probably skip it. But if your team bandies about "Secure coding" and "Threat Model" as terms of art, you may want to read this post. Basically it gives you a way of loading environment variables or code before your your code gets run.
🧪 Microsoft is testing Windows Feature Experiance Pack updates with Windows Insiders. The Windows Feature Experience Pack, so named because Microsoft's Marketing department has a minimum character limit quota; includes improvements to windows. In this case, an updated Snipping tool, text input panel, and a suggestion feature for the windows shell. According to this article, Microsoft wants to make future improvements to the.... Feature experience (Sorry not sorry) available through this... pack. If you are A Windows Insider, let me know how you like these updates.
📰 Microsoft Teams adds support for answering calls via Apple Carplay, transferring calls between mobile and desktop, and adding call recordings to onedrive. Oh for fucks sake. Instead of someone saying "You know what? Enough is enough. This "Work from anywhere while you're doing anything is nucking futz and we aren't going to do it any more. The eight-hour workday is hereby abolished for a four-hour workday that you'll actually be able to make it through and still get things done. I've never seen technology workers productive for an entire 8 hour day; and it's about time we stop pretending that they will be.
🎥

  continue reading

63 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Listen to this show while you explore
Play