Before that particular wanted ad, 8,000 people worked for the company and then nearly a quarter million, and they were capable of working collaboratively in fluid networks. We still talk about language, and keeping the females in mind serving the infrastructure of the technological age. Connections that are now patched electronically by digital assistanasi assistan assistants, bots, and ai many of which still speak by default in female voices. It started to disappear in the. She was at 40 female users that made it one of the earliest spaces online to be genuinely hospitable to women online, but thee resisted that she created it as a safe space for women. Bite me, she said, i wanted to get more in on echo to make it better. Not a refuge, not an accommodation, she understood that diversity is an asset that serves the entire community. She was building a social network. And she knew that if there was more perspectives there would be a more exciting and dynamic product. She was the only fo
The festival and enjoying a day out. The festival continues tomorrow and of course booktv will be live again tomorrow. Youve been listening to the last panel and that was women in science. That is with and natalia holtz. She will be joining us in just a minute to take your calls. Rise of the rocket girls is the name of her book. The women who propelled us from missiles to the moon to mars. And she joins us now here in the gallagher theater on the campus of the university of arizona. What was the common, the commonality they found among these women . These are women who loved math and science. But they were coming of age at a time when it was not an option for women. They were women going to school in the 1930s and 40s. They were frequently the only women in their math and science classes. I just heard that over and over again. And so you can imagine how it felt for them to come together and be part of this large group of women working at the jet propulsion laboratory. Did nasa have a s
For calculating the trajectory of the satellite as it left earth. So she is sitting there in the middle of the night on january 31, 1958 with a room full of men and they are all over her shoulder to find out if this mission will be a success. And it is her math done by hand with paper and pencil that lets us know explorer one has made it, america has its first satellite. That was one of the first story she told me. And it was so exciting, so thrilling to be able to hear firsthand what that was like. There are not very many people left that can tell us about these nasa missions, what it was like in mission control. It was thrilling to hear that way. Is it a coincidence that this program was starting the same year that went up . It started way before that actually. These were men and women that were working, starting in the late 1930s working on early missiles. Then by the 1950s they started adapting that technology and their goal really was to launch the worlds first satellite. And i st
One hour including questions and answers please hold the questions to the and. Immediately following the session the authors will autograph books at the bookstore tent on the of all bouffe 141. Books are available for purchase at this location. The of the will be 20 minutes late to signing books with a 20 minute interview with cspan. Text friend 52 04 14 book. I feel like i am in car talk. [laughter] your gift makes a difference to keep the program free of charge with critical literacy programs in our community. If at of respect for fellow audience members i urge you to turn off yourself alone and it is my pleasure to introduce the two authors we have here with us known for a variety of books that i think was reversed one comment i originally a New York Times reporter of psychology and somehow went to the dark side laugh laugh and she has a National Science board publicservice award for and as a microbiologist working with nasa general in the first book that she wrote was called cured
Last panel and that was women in science. That is with and natalia holtz. She will be joining us in just a minute to take your calls. Rise of the rocket girls is the name of her book. The women who propelled us from missiles to the moon to mars. And she joins us now here in the gallagher theater on the campus of the university of arizona. What was the common, the commonality they found among these women . These are women who loved math and science. But they were coming of age at a time when it was not an option for women. They were women going to school in the 1930s and 40s. They were frequently the only women in their math and science classes. I just heard that over and over again. And so you can imagine how it felt for them to come together and be part of this large group of women working at the jet propulsion laboratory. Did nasa have a specific program that encourage this . This was before nasa. So nasa studied in 1958. These women were hired in the 1940s and they were hired by a w