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Apple Technology

Tim Cook: 'No Good Excuse' For Lack of Women In Tech (bbc.com) 394

AmiMoJo shares a report from the BBC: Apple chief executive Tim Cook says there are still "not enough women at the table" at the world's tech firms -- including his own. He said there were "no good excuses" for the lack of women in the sector. Apple has just launched its founders' development program for female founders and app creators in the UK. "I think the the essence of technology and its effect on humanity depends upon women being at the table," Mr Cook says. "Technology's a great thing that will accomplish many things, but unless you have diverse views at the table that are working on it, you don't wind up with great solutions."

Apple had 35% female staff in the US in 2021, according to its own diversity figures. It launched its original Apple Health Kit in 2014 without a period tracker -- which led to accusations that this was an oversight due to male bias among its developers. One challenge facing the sector is the lack of girls choosing to pursue science, tech, engineering and maths subjects at school. "Businesses can't cop out and say 'there's not enough women taking computer science -- therefore I can't hire enough,'" says Mr Cook. "We have to fundamentally change the number of people that are taking computer science and programming." His view is that everybody should be required to take some sort of coding course by the time they finish school, in order to have a "working knowledge" of how coding works and how apps are created.
According to Deloitte Global, large global tech firms will reach nearly 33% overall female representation in their workforces in 2022 on average -- with 25% occupying technical roles.

In the interview with the BBC, Cook also commented on the future of augmented reality, saying: "in the future, people will wonder how we lived without AR." He added: "we're investing a ton in that space." Earlier this year, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo said Apple could announced its long-rumored mixed-reality headset as soon as January 2023.
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Tim Cook: 'No Good Excuse' For Lack of Women In Tech

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @09:36PM (#62919465)

    There are literally dozens of excellent papers explaining the infrequency of women in STEM, and their prevalence in some parts of STEM without the grinding hours, career death from childbirth, or horrible work/life balance issues common to so many STEM fields. It's so much *fun* to see idiots demand equal outcome rather than equal opportunity!

    • Women go for long term job security. Labor hire firms or temping is just toxic. Even Teachers are resenting one year contracts rather than permanent jobs. Then the long unpaid overtime, and unpaid learning, vs happy networking - so medical industry gets the cream of the crop. I have a CS degree, and I tell people not to do one, as over 35-40's much ageism. See IBM and the dino's. The big picture is whole of career earnings, and for that HV mechanic is better than welder or plumber. Electricians do well too.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      James Damore made the same mistake. The authors of the studies he cited claiming to show that women were simply less inclined towards careers in STEM came out and said he misinterpreted them.

      For example, in your post you talk about "grinding hours". That's not something inherent to STEM, and arguably it's because men are more willing to do them or less willing to complain about them. It would actually be better for men if more women entered STEM and pushed for better work/life balance. It would also help if

  • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @09:38PM (#62919469)

    ... lack of male nurses? ... lack of female fire fighters? ... lack of female plumbers?

    Providing a professional environment where people can be friendly and have friendly banter is one thing. Not hiring employees simply based on their genitals because you have some bullshit diversity hire "quota" is reverse discrimination. No one cares.

  • Jobs only cared about getting the right person for the job.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Jobs was constantly fighting his engineering staff. The engineers used to subvert him however they could, for example by adding expandability to Apple computers when Jobs wanted none. Many of them got fed up and left.

  • Yes, (Score:5, Insightful)

    by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @09:41PM (#62919483)

    He's right. There's no excuse, there's only facts. And it's a fact that by every metric that measures freedom of career choice, societies in which women are more free tend to have women focusing on careers that focus on interpersonal social dynamics, and societies that have less freedom of choice have women who tend to focus on money-making technical skills. India vs. the US is the classic example.

    There are studies undertaken by researchers who *wish* to find the opposite, but continually find that men and women tend to choose different types of careers. Again, not everyone, and you can't judge any one individual by their gender. https://www.ocregister.com/201... [ocregister.com]

    https://nautil.us/why-women-ch... [nautil.us]

    https://www.pewresearch.org/fa... [pewresearch.org]

    https://www.thequint.com/voice... [thequint.com]

    Women also tend to go into certain hard sciences more than men. Why do they not consider this evidence of discrimination? Equality of outcome is completely different than equality of opportunity and freedom of choice.

    • > He's right. There's no excuse, there's only facts.

      The idea that "there's only facts" does not seem well founded. There are tremendous politics involved in modern "inclusivity" programs, even if many seem founded on fantasy.

    • Re:Yes, (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @11:55PM (#62919717)

      Then explain why this changes over time? Why were there more women in the early days of computing? If this is innate for females then this should not have changed over time. I have seen a steady decrease in percentage of females since I started 40 years ago. There's definitely a societal influence here despite the trolls claiming otherwise.

      • Why do you need an explanation for this? The early days of computing were SO different than what it's evolved into, it's hardly even recognizable as the same field!

        As an example? Before my father passed away back in 2004, he was a Physics and Math professor, and used to work with mainframes and minicomputers occasionally. I remember finding cardboard boxes in the basement full of organized punch cards containing programs he used to load into them. He was utterly lost with the concept of a GUI, a la Windows,

  • You can have freedom or equal outcomes, but not both.

  • Cook also commented on the future of augmented reality, saying: "in the future, people will wonder how we lived without AR."

    Yeah, we kinda already have those kinds of people today who wonder how anyone lives without social media. They're called addicts.

    But hey, nice sales pitch. Lemme guess...the first one is free, right?

  • Women have much better alternatives then grinding at an 8 to 6 job
  • Mobile health apps originally focused on fitness, with actual health care both highly regulated and privacy sensitive. If I was trying to become a father, I wouldn't want to try to show off how many steps I hiked over the weekend to a coworker and accidentally display my sperm motility count. Better to have a separate app that is run by my clinic, not Apple or Google, with proper security and privacy in mind and that my doctor can access without me having to share my account. If GenZers are not concerned a

  • Spare me... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Ritz_Just_Ritz ( 883997 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @10:37PM (#62919567)

    I worked at a fortune (low number) firm that always talked a great game about diversity/inclusion/whatever. What I noticed when asking uncomfortable questions was that we had about an 80:20 male:female ratio in IT. I was hiring at all levels and didn't give a shit about degrees or where the person had worked before. I simply wanted intellectually curious people who were willing to roll up their sleeves and we'd teach them what they needed to know to get the work done. What I got from our "woke" recruiting department that was tirelessly virtue signalling on LinkedIn was:

    ~80% Indian men candidates

    Of the remaining 20%, most were men from varying backgrounds, but a vanishingly small percentage were women.

    I asked if we could re-visit which schools/colleges we visited to promote the company. I was shot down. Clearly, we weren't looking in the right places or we were not offering roles that were interesting for women. "Oh no, IT person, let us figure that out for you."

    It's pretty shameful how bad things are.

    We can do better.

  • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @10:39PM (#62919571) Homepage

    This is a radical idea, but maybe they don't want to work in tech? It certain seems that no matter how much they try to create a welcoming environment, women simply do not want to work in tech.

    For all his awkwardness, maybe James Damore was on to something? You know, that something that got him fired for daring to suggest men and women are attracted to different things.

    Simpler times.

    • This is a radical idea, but maybe they don't want to work in tech? It certain seems that no matter how much they try to create a welcoming environment, women simply do not want to work in tech.

      For all his awkwardness, maybe James Damore was on to something? You know, that something that got him fired for daring to suggest men and women are attracted to different things.

      Programming used to be female-dominated, only a mere 60 years ago. More importantly, modern humans first appeared around 300,000 years ago, while "tech" careers have been around for only a mere eyelash of a blink of that time. It strains credulity to say that there's an inherent biological sex difference due to hundreds of thousands of years of evolution that is (a) that strong and pervasive throughout the population to have the effect we see today, and (b) flipped in only the past two generations.

    • But WHY don't they want to work in tech? I think it's sociology, not biology. Because I have been around back when women were much better represented in computing. Even if you look at mathematics departments you will see far more women these days than in computer science. Societal attitudes have changed, and people have invented notions of things that are for girls and things that are for boys and it's not constant over time.

      • You're on the right track, with the wrong conclusion. If women were more represented in the past, do you think societies have since become more sexist? The evidence clearly points the other way.

        The gender equality paradox is a puzzle. As equality increases, the sexed diverge - notable in personality traits and career choices. Sociologists assume this shift is due to oppression, despite the evidence against the social constructionist belief. it's untenable to believe biology isn't playing a role. I'd say the

    • For all his awkwardness, maybe James Damore was on to something? You know, that something that got him fired for daring to suggest men and women are attracted to different things.

      Simpler times.

      James Damore wrote a long-ass essay and posted it within company resources on company time that upset a HUGE portion of his coworkers. Was his manifesto correct? I don't know. I don't care. I read it and was frankly unimpressed. However, I am confident that he wasn't paid to write it and doing so was a distraction to his job and definitely distracted many of his coworkers. He was bad for business. That's why he got fired. His fucking CEO had to leave his vacation and go and apologize for what some s

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If women don't want to work at Apple then Tim Cook should ask why that is. Is it something about the culture and reputation at Apple?

      If Damore is to be believed then women should love working at Apple, where there is a heavy emphasis on UX and cosmetics, much more so than most STEM companies. Apple is practically a fashion brand.

  • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @10:44PM (#62919587)
    None show up for the interview! I WANT WOMEN ON MY TEAM! I CANNOT HIRE ANY! I'm not even turning down shitty women. Almost none show up. The ones who fail our interview just end up working someplace nicer which is willing to sacrifice quality for diversity. There's a global engineering shortage and has been for as long as I can remember. We're not turning down qualified candidates. We're barely turning down unqualified ones. We're not getting turned down for not paying enough. We even train librarians, English majors, baristas, and fuckabout LARPers to be engineers. We started the program 6 years ago and most of the women quit.

    I've tried to recruit many of my ex-coworkers. It's TOUGH. I usually lose out because they find another job 5 miles closer to their house or some trivial reason that is neither the job nor the pay. One told me she just liked the other office complex more. Most find any job other than engineering: HR, project management, etc.

    Unless you can point me to a qualified pool of people who cannot find a job, I don't want to hear a word whining about lack of diversity. I have positions I can't fill and have to choose between candidates who can't do the job AND can't speak English AND don't want to learn either. Even the shittiest of candidates we reject...and you have to be REALLY shitty to get rejected by our idiot hiring board find jobs quickly somewhere else.

    Once there's a pool of talented and unemployed women...then we have an issue...until then...sorry...this is not a tech world issue. You can debate if it an educational system issue, but that's not really where I nor Tim Cook should be opining. The opportunities are there for women.
  • When you have 10 male applicants for every one female, and 8 of those have better credentials for the job...

    It's not discrimination.

    It's simply math. Demographics.

  • by lsllll ( 830002 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @11:12PM (#62919637)

    He said there were "no good excuses" for the lack of women in the sector.

    It's not that they're not good excuses, but that they're not excuses at all. Go read about countries like Sweden that have pretty much eliminated the role of gender in society, starting with kindergarten. They've eliminated pay disparity between men and women as much as they've been hoping for. Yet the majority of teachers and nurses are women and the majority of garbage men and tech workers are men. Watch Jordan Peterson talk about this very subject. The Scandinavian countries' experience with gender neutrality has produced exactly the opposite of what everyone called "equality". Turns out that, when you remove all the hindrances and worries of people about making a living by providing good social services and good pay, most women actually tend to go toward the jobs that they're more interested in and passionate about, instead of having to, say, become computer programmers when they actually have no interest in becoming computer programmers, but do it for money (Note that I said most women, not all women). But that very subject has become the elephant in the room that everybody seems to want to ignore.

    • If I didn't have to care about money, there are a lot of things I'd rather be doing than sitting in front of a computer all day.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      This is based on a study that has proven to be extremely flawed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Even after making corrections to errors that were found, other researchers could not reproduce their results.

      Even Sweden is far from having eliminated the role of gender in society. It's arguably impossible, given that even if Sweden was perfect people there are still exposed for foreign media and culture.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday September 28, 2022 @12:28AM (#62919771)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Gotta love the comments on this article so far.

    So typical - I suspect most made by old white males - greybeard slashdotters.

    Their argument being "Maybe women don't want to work in tech!"

    Well, sure, but there's many men who don't, too - so you are _completely_ missing the point.

    The point is _how_ gender bias is steered from an early age, how there's still very much systemic change required to shrug off stereotypical attitudes.

    Yes, many women don't want to work in tech, but many that DO, fear facing a male do

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      Yes, many women don't want to work in tech, but many that DO, fear facing a male dominated environment where they aren't treated seriously.

      I'd be absolutely *shocked* if a large percentage of women were thinking four years ahead as college freshmen trying to decide what to study. If college students understood their job prospects when choosing a major in year one, we'd have way, way fewer history majors than we do. :-D

      Maybe there are women who thought about that and decided not to get careers in CS, but I suspect at least 100x as many never even considered the possibility of going into CS in the first place, largely because they weren't expos

  • by Randseed ( 132501 ) on Wednesday September 28, 2022 @04:55AM (#62920129)
    Personally, I think our society is incredibly sexist and discriminatory because we don't have as many female manual laborers. Just walk by a construction site and you'll see mostly men. The fighting forces in the military are still mostly men. This is wrong, and obviously devalues women and is an example of a sexist society. The people that mow my lawn and do construction work need to be at least 52% female, 0.5% transgender(*), etc. (* -- https://williamsinstitute.law.... [ucla.edu] ). In fact, I think we should even have a caste system that forces a certain percentage of people into these kinds of jobs, of course dependent on various forms of identification. (/s -- for the stupid)
  • by xenog ( 3653043 ) on Wednesday September 28, 2022 @05:20AM (#62920159)

    Women are not interested in sitting in front of a computer for hours on end to solve complex abstract problems.

    Spare me the "not all women are like that", or the "that's because of social conditioning. Go read Steven Pinker's The Blank Slate. You may learn something.

    I used to be just the same. I used to be a feminist. I used to be a blank slatist. I used to be as brainwashed as most people here. I encouraged her to pursue a career in technology, but she didn't, not interested. I encouraged my wife to continue programming after we got married. She didn't. She wanted to have children instead and stay at home. Biology asserts itseld, we're attuned to evolutionary rewards, and the more you fight it, the more miserable you'll make yourself and those around you. Romanticism needs to die.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday September 28, 2022 @05:31AM (#62920177)

    No excuse for only 1% women bricklayers as well.

    Women are smart, they don't WANT certain jobs.

  • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Wednesday September 28, 2022 @09:48AM (#62920743)
    In my experience one of the basic causes is lack of interest. I know many, many women who are simply not interested in figuring out how technology works or creating computer programs or anything of the sort.

    The question is, why aren't women interested? My first guess would be cultural/educational factors in early childhood, but maybe genetics play a role as well? I feel like there should be more focus on figuring out the underlying cause than on post-hoc adjustments.

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