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Girl Geek Dinners: Leonie Cooper interviews Sarah Blow, the founder of Geek Girl Dinners.
In 2005, Sarah Blow attended an event called Geek Dinners, a technology gathering with industry speakers, and found that she was one of only 20 women in a crowd of 150 people. She was perturbed by the reactions to her presence...The reaction to Blow underlines the fact that women are still a significant minority in science, engineering and technology (SET)...On the train home from that event, Blow began work on an idea to turn those figures around. A few months later she held the first London Girl Geek Dinner. The premise is simple: a regular event, with speakers and no barrier to entry - men can attend if they are invited by a woman.
Apart from London, there are many Girl Geek Dinners held around the globe.
- New Zealand GGD [via Blogdini]
- Amsterdam Girl Geek Dinners [via The Next Web]
- Seattle GGD [via dotfiveone]
- Italy GGD [via Ms Adventures in Italy]
Click here for more Girl Geek Dinners information.
[via Social Sim]
This is a photo from The Great Geek Manual's Humor Category. The Great Geek Manual is a site devoted to all things Geeks. It features gadget and software links, humor, reviews, and a daily "This Day in Geek History" entry. If you like this photo, drop by to read the associated article.
This pretty much captures my uber-geekdom of freshman year. And below super nerd, is her trusty sidekick super polar bear, her true friend.
This one is for all the art history geeks out there :)
Please vote for it on Threadless if you're a fan!
www.threadless.com/submission/384226/Geek_Vase?streetteam...
Kwabena Dinizulu geeks griots.
What do YOU geek?
Learn about griot here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griot
Got this cupcake maden by adorable girls from The Geek Bakery at last Saturday's geek-market at KL10TCH!
Das Keyboard is an enhanced 104-key USB PC keyboard equiped with 100% blank keys mounted on precision and individually weighted key switches.
Most keyboards use a standard 55 grams of force required to register every key, Das Keyboard has 5 different levels of force. The keys are divided into groups and their feedback springs are weighted differently; from 35 grams to 80 grams, which correspond to the strength of the finger that touches the keys.