Happy Black History Month!
Every February, the United States celebrates the achievements and central role of Black Americans in our culture and history. Black History Month is recognized in many other countries, too including Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, and The Netherlands across various months.
As in many fields, the inclusion and elevation of Black people in software development is nowhere near what it needs to be — and one month of recognizing the achievements of Black people won't do a thing to change that. What will? For starters, educating ourselves on systemic racism, recognizing and addressing biases, hiring and promoting Black people, and putting money into programs that benefit Black students and workers.
But the importance of celebrating Black brilliance, joy, and history (in every field) can't be overstated. So today, we'd like to take a moment to recognize several contemporary Black American technologists who are making history today and inspire us deeply...
Majora Carter
source: Heather Kennedy/Getty Images
Where do we even start? Among many other hats she has worn, Majora Carter is an urban revitalization strategist and sustainability advocate. She is also responsible for helping to expand the tech-inclusion economy in the South Bronx, New York where she introduced MIT's first digital fabrication laboratory and co-founded several tech incubators and education centers. Through this work, Carter helped connect tech industry pioneers including Etsy, Google, and Cisco with diverse communities at all levels.
Majora Carter also founded the Bronx Tech Meetup, which has over 700 members today.
John Henry Thompson
John Henry Thompson is a Jamaican-American software engineer and the inventor of Linguo: a verbose object-oriented scripting language (the primary programming language on the Adobe Shockwave platform). Formerly, John Henry Thompson was the Chief Scientist at Macromedia: a graphics, multimedia, and web development software company.
He is also passionate about art and studied drawing and painting at The Art Students League of New York. Throughout his career, John Henry Thompson has dedicated himself to bridging the gap between computing and the arts and helping others use the computer as an expressive instrument. Today, he works as a software consultant.
Mark Dean
Mark Dean holds three of the nine existing personal computer patents — which makes sense, considering the fact that he co-created the IBM personal computer in 1981. Dean was also the first African-American to become an IBM Fellow and is a card-carrying member of the National Inventors Hall of Fame in the United States (— well, if those in the N.I.H.F. don't carry cards, they should!).
Dean is responsible for a number of landmark computing technologies including the color PC monitor, the first gigahertz chip, and the Industry Standard Architecture system bus.
Timnit Gebru
Timnit Gebru is an Ethiopian-born computer scientist and expert in the critical fields of algorithmic bias and data mining. She is the co-founder of Black in AI, a group of Black computer scientists working in artificial intelligence. Throughout her career, Gebru has done some truly important work to shed light on the biases that exist in software development and how it impacts AI. We believe this is some of the most important ethical work we face as technologists today.
Kimberly Bryant
source: nrkbeta on Flickr
Kimberly Bryant is an electrical engineer and founder of the incredible Black Girls Code: a not-for-profit education center that teaches basic programming concepts to Black girls. Bryant has been recognized for her contributions to technology and inclusion by the United States Government, the Smithsonian museum, Business Insider, and many other institutions. More importantly, Black Girls Code has helped teach and empower many Black girls ages 7-17 about computer programming and digital technology.
We'd love to hear what Black tech history-makers inspire you in the comments below!
As we said above, Black people in tech, specifically in the United States, have had their work minimized and their opportunities suppressed for far too long, and it's long past due that we confront this and explore the reasons that exist within ourselves as people of this industry.
One practical way to address racism and bias in tech is to learn about and support Black-run tech organizations and projects. A few of our favorites are All Star Code, Black Female Founders, Blacks In Technology, /dev/color, Data For Black Lives, and of course, Black Girls Code and Black in AI. Share others that we should all know about below!
P.S. Check out this awesome discussion around historical Black technologists via CodeNewbie Community
Top comments (36)
I don’t know a tech history maker but one black person who teaches tech using YT, is Dagogo Altraide or famously known as Coldfusion on YT, he is the best person on earth according to me who teaches tech and science in a very interesting and documentary type videos!!
Thank you. Subscribed his channel. Been there for a couple of hours and ordered his book. Quality stuff.
Yeah quality is at its highest level!
Wow, he's a black person!!! I love that!!
The fact that he's black makes me more of a fan! Thank you for this insight 🤯
Marques Brownlee / MKBHD – not because he's a genius programmer or something, but for his thoughtful and calm way of communicating criticism, which I really admire.
Angie Jones
Angie Jones is a Java Champion and Principal Developer Advocate
who specializes in test automation strategies and techniques.
She shares her wealth of knowledge by speaking and teaching at software conferences all over the world and leading the online learning platform, Test Automation University.
🙏🏾
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarence_Ell...
Dr. Ellis was one of the first researchers in collaborative systems and co-created OT
Maybe not at a "history maker" level, but Angie Jones is definitely a leader and inspiration for many developers. She became the first Black female Java Champion, she is an amazing presenter, and shares her knowledge and a ton of interesting information on her Twitter account.
thank you 🙏🏾 I also am the inventor of 26 patents so lil bit of a history maker 😊
I stand corrected. That's really impressive! And I learned that I have to add inventor to the list of amazing things you do 🙂
Kelsey Hightower! What a great teacher and devops engineer. Inspired me to get better with automation. He's really the only person who comes immediately to mind.
scrolled through the comments looking for his name, glad I found it already here
Big shout out to @jeromehardaway , founder of the non-profit, @vetswhocode. He's changing lives!
I'd love to give a shout-out to Leon Noel! leonnoel.com/about/ Leon is the Managing Director of Engineering @ Resilient Coders and Distinguished Faculty @ General Assembly. I encountered Leon last summer when he offered a short boot-camp for POC and people affected by the pandemic to begin learning Full Stack Web Development. When his short camp was successful, he ramped things up and began offering #100Devs, a 30-week full stack online bootcamp. The offerings in #100Devs are very similar to what he offers with his day job at Resilient Coders - everything is 100% free (always) and he takes people with no (or little) technical background and teaches them everything they need to know to get a wonderful job in the software engineering field, including interview prep, resume reviews, networking advice and training, and anything they might need on both the soft-skills as well as technical side of the table. His success rate at RC is over 85% placement within 3 months of graduation, including many graduates who were hired at FAANG companies. Leon is one of the most giving people I have ever known, and I am proud to be one of his students.
For me it's Astronaut Victor J Glover. Who is currently on the ISS
I was thinking about NASA just a few weeks ago as that was the anniversary of the Challenger tragedy in 1986, which was carrying astronaut Ron McNair. ✨🙏🏾✨
Some of the guests we've had on the DevDiscuss podcast happen to black engineers who inspire countless developers.
Here are a couple episodes highly worth checking out:
How we represent and show respect to our BIPOC tech contributors in general is not one-size-fits-all, but in terms of excellence in contribution to tech in general, Kelsey and Courtland in the above shows are hugely influential by any measure.
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