Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Computer science

WiR redlist index: Computer science


Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR). Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our scope is women's biographies, women's works, and women's issues, broadly construed.

This list of red links is intended to serve as a basis for creating new articles on the English Wikipedia. Please note however that the red links on this list may well not be suitable as the basis for an article. All new articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability criteria with reliable independent sources.

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This is a list under development of missing articles on women who are (or have been) notable for their contribution to technology in academics, business, economics, politics, research, government or the social sector.

See also Requested articles for computer-related people

Computer science

Brazil

  • Cristine Hoepers, Cybersecurity expert and General Manager of the Brazilian CERT.[1] (Draft here (deleted))

China

  • Hua Wu, Chinese computer scientist.

Turkey

  • Ayse Naz Erkan is a Turkish computer scientist.

UK

  • Kathy Humphry, (b. 1944), [2]
  • Heather Liddell, (b. 1940), oral history
  • Judith Mills, (b. 1950), [3]
  • Pamela Morton, (b. 1933), [4]
  • Karen Shipp, [5]
  • Pat Stewart (computer scientist), [6]
  • Diane Wray, [7]

US and Canada

Yugoslavia

  • Bojana Ostojic, works for Microsoft now, [10]

Software Engineers

Switzerland

  • Maia Engeli, Swiss. Art, software development, professor and writer [11]

US

  • Barbara Bauer, technology innovation, software development, global management
  • Margie Graves Principal Deputy Chief Information Officer Department of Homeland Security see D.C.'s Top 50 Women In Tech List 2016 with a short interview
  • Durdana Habib, Chair of Women in Engineering at IEEE
  • Kay Kapoor, President, AT&T Global Business – Public Sector Solutions see D.C.'s Top 50 Women In Tech List 2016 with a short interview
  • Lisa McVey (technologist), CIO of Enterprise Information Systems, Enterprise Medical Imaging, Automation, McKesson Corporation
  • Janet Perna, former General Manager of Information Management Solutions at [IBM] specializing in Distributed database systems / IBM DB2 (see also Janet Perna's oral history)
  • Mai Abualkas Temraz, Mentorship & Women’s Inclusivity Program Coordinator at Gaza Sky Geeks (GSG), Gaza’s first startup accelerator and co-working hub
  • Muriel Vasconcellos (born 1933), American machine translation expert

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Computer science, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.