Being a Woman Programmer
From SystersWiki
"I broke into the ranks of computing in the early 1980s, when women were just starting to poke their shoulder pads through crowds of men. There was no legal protection against “hostile environments for women.” I endured a client — a sweaty man with pendulous earlobes — who stroked my back as I worked to fix his system. At any moment I expected him to snap my bra. I considered installing a small software bomb but understood, right then, what was more important to me than revenge: the desire to create good systems."
Shared by ★ Ellen Ullman ★ , American computer programmer and author, in her book "Life in Code, A personal history of technology.