A free resource from Jayne
Cravens
via coyotecommunications.com & coyoteboard.com (same web site)
San Francisco Women of the Web
(SFWOW):
A
History
In the 1990s, various associations sprung up all over the USA to support
women using the Internet as a primary part of their work - or who wanted
to. These associations created safe, supportive, content-rich, fun
spaces, both online and in real spaces, for women to talk about their
tech and online-related work, to ask questions, and to learn from each
other. Some became their own nonprofit organizations and some stayed
informal groups. Some of the most well known of these women-focused tech
associations were Webgrrls in various cities, Her
Domain in Austin, Texas and San Francisco Women of
the Web in California. I was very involved with Her Domain
from 1997 through the start of 2001.
What I loved about these groups was
that they created spaces online and off that made members feel so
welcomed - and smart. I learned so much via Her Domain, and felt like I
had lots to offer as well. All of these women-focused tech groups had
web sites that offered terrific resources and showcased the work of
members, but even more, they had email-based discussion groups, where we
talked, discussed, argued, shared jobs openings, talked about challenges
and dreamed up various futures. The in-person, onsite get-togethers felt
informal and fun - San Francisco Women of the Web called theirs Scrappy
Hours.
San Francisco Women of the Web chose 25 women in 1998, in 1999, in 2000
and in 2001, recognizing them with their Women of the Web award. In
2001, I was one of those women. The Top25 Women on the Web awards were
unique at the time, recognizing the achievements of women who San
Francisco WOW felt had most inspired people worldwide with their
efforts to advance technology, contribute to the community, and set an
example as successful business women in the Internet and new media
industries. The awards recognize the achievements of women who have
made a significant contribution to the advancement of technology and
to the advancement of women in technology-related fields. The 2001
awards also honored those who have helped increase the number of women
on the Internet/online to more than half the Internet population, and
emphasized the community-based network of women who have helped each
other in technology-related fields.
To help highlight some of the many women who played important roles in
the 1990s Internet - which I consider the "early days" - as well as some
truly pioneering tech projects that laid the groundwork for the success
of so many initiatives today, I have put the list of Top25
Women on the Web for these four years women below, with
their roles/positions/accomplishments at the time, as stated on the
original web site. You can confirm these lists using the original top25.org
URL on archive.org.
Note that the URL of San
Francisco WOW was sfwow.org - the organization
dissolved in 2012 and the URL is now for a completely different
entity. Each name linked to a brief profile about the person - sorry,
I don't have time to capture and post them as well. Names are spelled
exactly as they appear on the original lists.
2001
Monika Henzinger, Ph.D., Director of Research, Google Inc.
Karan Eriksson, Partner, CEO InterestAlert, CP Software Group
Tracy Wilen, Ph.D., Operations Management, Cisco Systems Inc
Katharine Mieszkowski, Senior Writer, Salon.com
Jayne Cravens, Virtual
Volunteering
Sharron Rush, Executive Director, Knowbility,
Inc.
Joan Korenman, Ph.D., Director, Center for Women and Information
Technology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC)
Mari Matsunaga, NTT DoCoMo
Ardith Ibanez Rigby, Creative Director, akimbo design
Bonnie Bracey, bracey-pearl.org
Barbara Simons, Ph.D., Educator, Assn. of Computing Machinery (ACM)
Tiffany Shlain, Founder and Director, The Webby Awards
Ruann Ernst, Ph.D., Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Digital
Island
Ann Navarro, President, WebGeek, Inc.
Louise Kirkbride, CEO, Broad Daylight
Carol Muller, Ph.D., Executive Director/Founder, MentorNet
Netochka Nezvanova, Art Director
Patricia Beckmann, Founder, Bunsella Films
Janette Bradley, Ph.D, Director and Executive Producer, AvidProNet
Mala Chandra, VP of Platform Engineering, Zaplet
Tracey Pettengill, CEO, 4charity
Roberta Furger, Oakland Tech advisor, Julia Morgan School for Girls,
and author, educator, advocate
Evelyn Pine, Activist in electronic democracy
Mie-Yun Lee, Founder and VP, Content, BuyerZone.com
Doreen Galli, Ph.D., Global Practice Executive, International
Business Machines (IBM)
2000 "Leaders of the Millennium"
Carol Bartz, CEO, Autodesk
Radha Basu, CEO, Support.com
Anita Brown, Founder of Blackgeeks.com
KC Claffy, Research scientist and programmer at Caida.org, the
Cooperative Association of Internet Data Analysis
Joy Covey, Chief Strategy Officer, Amazon.com
Donna Dubinsky, Co-Founder and CEO of Handspring
Judith Estrin, SVP & CTO, Cisco Systems
Carly Fiorina, CEO and President, Hewlett Packard
Ellen Hancock, President & CEO of Exodus Communications
Dawn Lepore, CIO and Vice Chairman, Charles Schwab
Marci Lockwood, Executive Director, Institute for Global
Communications (IGC)
Marney Morris, Founder, Animatrix
Catherine Muther, Founder, Three Guineas Fund and Women's Technology
Cluster
Jayne Newell-Lanza, go2omedia.com, Shesgotittogether.com, also
founder of Profit magazine where she is Publisher and Editor
Olivia Ongpin, Designer, co-founder of fabric8.com
Deb Richardson, Founder, LinuxChix, Developer/Manager of Open Source
WritersGroup
Linda Sanford, General Manager Global Industries at IBM
Megan Smith, CEO, PlanetOut
Ellen Ullman, Author, programmer
Heidi Van Arnem, Founder, Heidi Van Arnem Foundation (HVAF) and CEO,
ICANonline.net
Julie Wainwright, CEO, Pets.com
Gail Williams, Executive Director, The Well
Ann Winblad, Co-founding partner, Hummer Winblad Venture Partners
1999
Dr. Anita Borg , President and Founding Director, Institute for
Women and Technology
Barbara Boxer, United States Senator
Christine Comaford, Managing Director and a General Partner of
Artemis Ventures, an incubator for software startups
Nikki Douglas, Editor / Publisher / Creator of RiotGrrl &
GrrlGamer
Rebecca Eisenberg, Internet and technology business and culture
writer
Melinda French-Gates & Patty Stonesifer, Gates Library
Foundation
Lisa Friendly, Java Software, Sun Microsystems, Inc., Senior
Manager, Technical Publications and Information Design and Editor,
Sun's Addison-Wesley Java Series
Dr. Jose-Marie Griffiths, University of Michigan Chief Information
Officer and Executive Director, Information Technology Division
Auriea Harvey, Creator and designer, www.Entropy8.com
Susan Lammers, CEO, Headbone Interactive
Lavonne Luquis, President and co-founder of LatinoLink
Mary Meeker, Managing Director -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter,
Internet/New Media & PC Software Equity Research Analyst
Carol Moore, Vice President, Corporate Internet Programs for IBM
Marie-Helene Mottin-Sylla, Activist encouraging women, particularly
in Francophone Africa, to use information and communication
technologies to share and disseminate information
Evi Nemeth, Professor at University of Colorado, Leader in Unix
System Administration
Jan Peters, CEO of Media One
Aileen Lopez Pugh, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer at TeleBank
Dr. Deborah Triant Rieman, CEO of Check Point Software
Gina Smith, ABC technology correspondent
Kara Swisher, Author of aol.com, and Wall Street Journal reporter
Lisa Voldeng, Entertainment and Technology Analyst, CEO and Founder
of Uberbabe media
Lynda Weinman, Author, web design educator
Meg Whitman, CEO, eBay
Nancy Yeager, Engineer, Author, Researcher at National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)
Roya Zamanzadeh, CEO of Pear Transmedia and Editor of ZAN, a
directory / anthology on Iranian women
1998
Sarah Allen, Engineer, Macromedia Software
Donna Auguste, CEO of Freshwater Software
Janelle Brown, Culture writer for Wired News and co-founder of Maxi
Magazine
Red Burns, Founder and chair, NYU Interactive Technology Program
Denise Caruso, Digital commerce columnist and executive producer for
Spotlight
Denise Castellucci, Creator, Voices of Adoption Website
Linda McCutcheon Conneally, President of Pathfinder
Esther Dyson, Author of Release 2.0, chair of EFF, the Electronic
Frontier Foundation
Mary Furlong, Founder and CEO of Third Age Media and founder of
SeniorNet
Laura Gropp, Founder and CEO of Girl Games Inc.
Donna L. Hoffman, Internet researcher, writer and commentator and
Vanderbilt University Professor
Molly E. Holzschlag, Author, instructor and new media designer
Stacy Horn, Creator, Echo NYC and author of "Cyberville"
Brenda Laurel, Co-founder and vice president of design, Purple Moon
Laura Lemay, Author of HTML design and publishing books
Pattie Maes, Researcher, Intelligent Software Agents
Teresa Martin, Co- founder, president and CEO, Project Cool
Marleen McDaniel, CEO of Women's Wire
Jane Metcalfe, President of Wired Ventures Limited and co-founder of
Wired magazine
Kim Polese, President and CEO of Marimba, Inc.
Pamela Samuelson, EFF Fellow and legal commentator on Internet
privacy
Aliza Sherman, Founder of Webgrrls International and Cybergrrl
Internet Media
Janese Swanson, Founder and CEO of Girl Tech
Cynthia Waddell, Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, City
of San Jose and author of Website Accessibility Design Standards
Robin Wolaner, Executive vice president of CNET, Inc.
Also see:
- United Nations Technology
Service (UNITeS), a global volunteer initiative, created
by Kofi Annan in 2000, that both supported volunteers applying
information and communications technologies for development (ICT4D)
and promoted volunteerism as a fundamental element of successful
ICT4D initiatives. It was administered by the UN Volunteers program,
and during the tenure of UNITeS, the UNV program helped place and/or
support more than 300 volunteers applying ICT4D in more than 50
developing countries, including 28 Least Developed Countries (LDC),
making it one of the largest volunteering in ICT4D initiatives. The
activities of UN Volunteers, as well as those by tech volunteers
working through NetCorps, CompuMentor, the Association for
Progressive Communications, Australian Volunteers International,
NetCorps, Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) and Volunteers in
Technical Assistance (VITA), were tracked and promoted by UNITeS as
part of its overall mission. Part of the UNITeS mandate was to try
to track all of the various tech volunteering initiatives and
encourage them to share their best practices and challenges with
each other. UNITeS was discontinued as an active program in 2005.
- What Was NetAid?
First there was Band Aid, then Live Aid, and Farm Aid, and then came
NetAid, an initiative that was also launched with celebrity-laden
concerts and a great deal of media coverage. The NetAid initiative
was meant to harness the Internet to raise money and awareness for
the Jubilee 2000 campaign, to raise awareness for the challenges in
developing countries, and to allow people to volunteer online,
donating their skills to help people in the developing world.
NetAid's goal was to make global philanthropy more efficient. This
page reviews who was involved, how the initiative evolved, and its
legacy regarding virtual volunteering.
- Impact Online: A History
Impact Online was a nonprofit organization founded in the mid 1990s.
It was one of the first web sites, and maybe the first web site,
where nonprofits could post their volunteering opportunities and
people that wanted to help could sign up to help. It later became
VolunteerMatch. Unfortunately, someone requested that old versions
of the Impact Online web site be removed from the Internet Wayback
Machine, and so all archives of the original web site are gone.
Luckily, I downloaded some of text and graphics from that original,
pioneering web site. I'm sharing them here because the original
Impact Online initiative deserves to be remembered and honored.
- Lessons from
onlinevolunteering.org
Some key learnings from directing the UN's Online Volunteering
service from February 2001 to February 2005, including support
materials for those using the service to host online volunteers.
- Al
Gore Campaign Pioneered Virtual Volunteering
Back in 2000, when Al Gore ran for president, his campaign
championed virtual volunteering by recruiting online volunteers to
help online with his election efforts. I've tried to present some of
what his campaign did - this pioneering effort deserves to be
remembered, as do some of the lessons from such.
- A history of the Smart
Valley initiative
In 1994, perhaps earlier, an initiative called Smart
Valley was launched in California. Smart Valley was a
501(c)(6) nonprofit organization focused on creating an "information
infrastructure" in Silicon Valley, California - Palo Alto, Mountain
View, Sunnyvale, Cupertino, San José, Santa Clara and the
surrounding area, creating projects to enhance the quality of life
in Silicon Valley. Smart Valley's projected included SmartSchools
NetDay and PC Day, Smart Voter, to help people learn about upcoming
elections, Connect 96: The Global Summit on Building Electronic
Communities, the Public Access Network (PAN), a Telecommuting
Initiative, and the Smart Valley Webmasters Group. Smart Valley was
also affiliated with the nonprofit organization Plugged In, one of
the first digital divide efforts, working to bring "the tremendous
technological resources available in the Silicon Valley to youth in
low-income communities" in East Palo Alto and SV-PAL, the Silicon
Valley Public Access Link.
- Early History of
Nonprofits & the Internet
The Internet has always been about people and organizations
networking with each other, sharing ideas and comments, and
collaborating online. It has always been interactive and dynamic.
And there were many nonprofit organizations who "got" it early --
earlier than many for-profit companies. So I've attempted to set the
record straight: I've prepared a web page that talks about the early
history of nonprofits and the Internet. It focuses on 1995 and
previous years. It talks a little about what nonprofits were using
the cyberspace for as well at that time and lists the names of key
people and organizations who helped get nonprofit organizations
using the Internet in substantial numbers in 1995 and before. Edits
and additions are welcomed.
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