> Programming was originally an exclusively female profession because it was seen as lowly-paid "women's work".
Every time this comes up, someone points out that "programming" was mostly data entry at that time, and that there is a suspicious correlation between the decline in female programmers and the movement of data entry from programmers to administrators.
I can't seem to find hard data either way, though. So make of that what you will.
Every time this comes up, someone points out that "programming" was mostly data entry at that time, and that there is a suspicious correlation between the decline in female programmers and the movement of data entry from programmers to administrators.
I can't seem to find hard data either way, though. So make of that what you will.