Tag Archives: Geeks

31st Episcopal Convention

El Camino Real Convention Sign Salinas

Today is the second day of the annual convention of the Diocese of El Camino Real, in Salinas California. We are honored to host two guest Bishops, the Right Reverend Sadock Makaya (Diocese of Western Tanganyika) and the Rt. Rev. Michael Perham (Diocese of Gloucester). Our own Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves has been exchanging visits with Bishops Sadock and Michael in their home lands in Africa and Europe. This is a continuing process of Indaba, talking things through slowly and building relationships with a focus on respect. The bishops’ visit is part a remarkably successful long-term communication between very different areas of the world and of the Anglican Communion.

My husband John Plocher is sitting in Geek Central, hidden behind the big screen at the front of the hall, as a member of the technical team lead by Rev. Stephenie Cooper. When I am not being a technical roadie, I am sitting at the table with the delegates from the parish of St. Andrew’s (Saratoga).

See my 2009 blog entry How to Run a Church Convention for details on what John and Stephenie were doing.

Bishops Makaya Perham Gray-Reeves

El Camino Real Convention

Images Copyright 2011 Katy Dickinson

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Geeky Shopping in China

Shenzhen China Shopping Trip

My husband John has been working in Xian and Shenzhen, China, this month, returning home at last next Wednesday. I have written before about John and his blinky lights – model railroad signal indicators – and open source boards.  While in Shenzhen, he went shopping several times in the technical parts district, including a visit to the company that makes his boards.

A friend said that John had so many LEDs flashing in his room that at night it was easy to see which was John’s window at the Hasee Paradise Hotel near the Huawei campus. John’s new geek ware was heavy: he had to pay for 10 kilos extra weight flying back from Shenzhen to Xian.

John Plocher in Shenzhen China

Image Copyright 2011 by John Plocher

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Moon Cakes and Dragon Boats

Traditional Moon Cakes . Hong Kong Moon Cakes

I am often asked how working for a Chinese company is different. Telecom giant Huawei has its US headquarters here in Santa Clara, California, in the middle of the Silicon Valley. In the last 16 months, I have found much is the same as working for any technical company.  Huawei’s cafeteria offers the same food categories as we had at Sun Microsystems: grill, Chinese, today’s special (usually Mexican), soup, salad, and sandwiches.

However, there are differences. Last week was the Mid-Autumn Festival – like Thanksgiving but with different traditions.  We Americans grow up with turkey, corn, and pumpkin stories involving Pilgrims and Native Americans. I figured there was a history for Mid-Autumn Festival moon cakes too.  So far, I have heard three different versions.  My favorite is the ancient tale about the overthrow of Mongol rule helped by secret messages smuggled in moon cakes.  There is also one about the round cake shape reflecting family togetherness, and a third story about shooting ten arrows at the sun.

I was recently invited to a party in a Huawei conference room – a special tasting of fancy frozen moon cakes, just arrived from Hong Kong. Later, everyone in the company was given their choice of up to three traditional baked moon cakes to eat or take home – take your pick free from open baskets in the cafeteria. Having been born and raised in San Francisco, I have always liked the red bean moon cakes but Date and Lotus Seed fillings are good too. Green Tea filling is my least favorite.

Last Saturday was the 16th annual San Francisco International Dragon Boat Festival. This was the first year that Huawei in Santa Clara entered a crew for the Treasure Island race. Huawei’s office in Texas also entered a crew into their local dragon boat race. I wrote earlier about Huawei’s passion for ping pong. So, some food, sports, and traditions are different but in many ways we are all geeks together.

Huawei Dragon Boat Race Poster

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Geeky Model Trains

Yolo Short Line Dinner Train

While I was in Washington DC with the TechWomen mentoring program, my husband John was giving technical presentations at the National Model Railroad Association convention in Sacramento, California. He talked about state-of-the-art for model train layout wiring and the use of Arduino electronics in model trains. John also went on a Yolo Short Line train ride in Sacramento, a tour of the Lehigh Permanente Cement Plant in Cupertino, Sacramento area model railroad layout tours, a visit to the excellent California State Railroad Museum, and a generally had fun with the boys while I was off hanging out with the girls.

Lehigh Cement Plant Tour, Cupertino CA

Images by John Plocher, Copyright 2011

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37 Sisters – TechWomen

TechWomen . TechWomen . TechWomen

Yesterday, we held the final TechWomen presentations by the 37 Mentees from Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and the Palestinian Territories. A year ago, when the Anita Borg Institute staff and I first started working toward this goal with the Institute of International Education, we hoped that this program would further ABI’s Mission to:

* increase the impact of women on all aspects of technology, and
* increase the positive impact of technology on the world’s women.

I still think TechWomen will do that. What I didn’t know was how the program would powerfully effect the lives of these particular women, and how we who have worked with them would ourselves be changed by their passion, dedication, and energy. When I listened closely to yesterday’s 37 five-minute talks, I heard many Mentees call the TechWomen group their new sisters, friends for life.

The King in Shakespeare’s Henry V, famously speaks of “We few, we happy few, we band of brothers”. In TechWomen, we have created a “band of sisters” who I believe will indeed change our world for the better. I have been honored to help teach and support them and I will watch their accomplishments for many years with great pride. They have stolen my heart.

Next week, we enter into the pomp of Washington, D.C. The program participants will be honored at the U.S. State Department by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who has generously supported the program from the start. This interim for public celebration comes between the learning and stretching we have all experienced here in the Silicon Valley and the harder work of making new dreams real when the Mentees go home to the Middle East and North Africa.

Huawei TechWomen

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Opening Day TechWomen

TechWomen in San Francisco

Today is the opening day of the first TechWomen mentoring program. I am in San Francisco listening to a panel from the three organizations which put together the program. TechWomen is funded by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA), managed by the Institute of International Education (IIE), and implemented in partnership with the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology (ABI).  I have been working on TechWomen with ABI during the last year.

We were welcomed by Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs Ann Stock on behalf of TechWomen’s sponsor, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. We also enjoyed an inspirational talk by Google Engineering Vice President Jen Fitzpatrick.

The best part has been finally meeting the 37 technical women Mentees from 6 Middle Eastern and North African countries and territories in person, after so much planning and hard work. I know how to say their names now (sortof, anyway). I was happy to hear that some Mentees have just as much trouble saying our names.

Linda Schneider (Huawei Distinguished Engineer), Athellina Athsani (Huawei Senior Manager), and I just met the three TechWomen Mentees who will be hosted by Huawei this month. So exciting!

Huawei TechWomen

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Stolen Purse

My purse was stolen yesterday night – keys and checkbook and everything. I filed a San Jose police report but I don’t expect much to come of that. For the last three years, my husband John and I have volunteered as teachers for 2 hours a week at an after school program about a mile from our house. Yesterday, toward the end of the session, we left the front door unlocked so that parents could pick up their kids. Someone walked in and took my purse plus a 4th grade boy’s backpack – probably to hide my purse in. The boy lost school books, his reading book, and a library book that he has to pay for. What a depressing experience.

I spent last night calling our bank and credit card companies to put holds on our accounts.  I am entirely sick of telling phone customer service staff the last four digits of my Social Security Number, my birth date, mother’s maiden name, zip code, etc. to get them to talk with me.   I got up early this morning to go to the California Department of Motor Vehicles to request a replacement driver’s license. $25 and one hour in line later, I went to the bank for two hours to open up new accounts and sign up for an identity theft watch service. I am using an old purse, spare comb, and John’s keys to my car. John, sweet man that he is, bought me a new iPhone today so I don’t go into technology withdrawal. Costing out everything that was in my purse, my phone, camera, and surprisingly, replacement smart keys for our cars came out most expensive. It will take weeks to get everything replaced. Trying to remember what was actually in my purse has been a challenge.

I am more than ever a fan of mSecure, an “ultra-secure 256bit blowfish encryption” software application that keeps all of my private information. I bought mSecure for both my iPhone and my MacBook. Over the last year, I typed all of my codes and passwords and identifications into mSecure then backed it up by synchronizing with my MacBook. Since I ran sync just a few days ago, very little information was lost with my iPhone. My iPhone had a password and AT&T disabled that account last night.

My husband has pointed out that my carrying around three Apple computers (iPhone, iPad, and MacBook) plus my Dell work laptop while calling myself a technology minimalist is perhaps inconsistent. I really love technology that works well and for me that means Apple products. (I think I just came out of the closet as a Apple Geek.)

The other volunteers last night were wonderful. Luis and Roberto came home with us to be sure no thieves were in our house (a real and scary possibility). I am glad we have two big dogs. I sent email to our neighborhood list to ask everyone to keep an eye on our home just in case. We have received many supportive and encouraging emails and suggestions.

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