Tag Archives: Huawei

Hopper Conference – Day 1, Portland Oregon

Mount Shasta in snow

Today is the opening of the sold-out GHC11 – the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women and Computing here in Portland, Oregon. My contribution to the world’s greatest conference for technical women came early: attending the ABI Advisory Board meeting this morning and inviting Janet Abbate, Assistant Professor, Science and Technology in Society, Virginia Tech, to be one of the panel at the Hopper Conference Newcomer’s orientation this afternoon. Other than that, I am mostly hanging out with my daughter Jessica and the TechWomen mentees and mentors and staff. I am also representing Huawei, one of the sponsors of the scholarships to bring some of the TechWomen mentees to GHC11.

The flight north from the San Francisco Bay Area this morning was spectacular: we flew directly over a massive, cloudless and snowy Mount Shasta and smaller wintery mountains. Between GHC events, we plan to sample the delights of this pleasant town: this morning we ate Voodoo Doughnuts and tomorrow we plan to go to Powells City of Books. Jessica presents her panel and poster tomorrow afternoon.

Grace Hopper Celebration of Women and Computing

TechWomen at GHC11

TechWomen at GHC11 . Voodoo Doughnut

Images Copyright 2011 Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen in Morocco – Day 6 in Rabat

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The TechWomen delegation in Morocco has had an excellent experience, both teaching and learning this week. We spent time with a wide variety of women’s organizations – some technical and others focused on social improvement. The delegation visited Marrakech, Casablanca, Rabat and other cities – all different and fascinating. Spending the week with twenty talented and remarkably intelligent technical women has been a lasting inspiration. Our time on the bus chatting about family, religion, Engineering, and business has been as valuable as all of the formal events.

I was proud that my company, Huawei, was able to host the delegation for dinner last night at the Royal Nautique Club Bourgreg in Sale, across the river from Rabat. Huawei has 350 staff here in Morocco and several of the women technical staff joined us for dinner. Today the delegation is at a conference in Casablanca.

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Images Copyright 2011 Katy Dickinson
#WIT11

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TechWomen in Morocco – Day 5

TechWomen with the Association MOUASSAT, Casablanca Morocco

The TechWomen delegation in Morocco had a full and interesting day today in Casablanca and Mohammedia. Our day started early, so we got to watch produce being sold in the neighborhoods from tiltcarts. It is surprising to see sheep, cows, horses, and donkeys grazing and wandering around on city streets. We had one herd of sheep cross the freeway in front of our bus – with the shepherd throwing smalls stones at the last sheep while he caught the one which was refusing to cross.

We visited the Association MOUASSAT (Nonprofit of Equality) which supports poor widows and their children. It seems that the high number of traffic fatalities leads Morocco to have many widows. We then met the leadership and faculty of the Universite Mohammedia Hassan II and we gave presentations on technical workflow management, and using and contributing to Open Source. After lunch with the faculty, we visited and traded presentations at the Galilee-Vivaldi girls College and Lycee. I just got back to the hotel from a lavish and delightful family dinner at the home of one of the TechWomen mentees. An amazing and inspiring day.

Tomorrow, the TechWomen are being hosted for dinner by Huawei in Rabat after a day of meetings and presentations.

TechWomen with the Association MOUASSAT, Casablanca Morocco

Donkeys in Casablanca Morocco

Universite Mohammedia Hassan II and TechWomen

alilee-Vivaldi girls College and Lycee with TechWomen

TechWomen dinner

TechWomen dinner

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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Education for Ministry

EfM Education for Ministry

Last year, although working two interesting jobs (for Huawei and TechWomen), I also started a four year course of Bible study and theological reflection.  Despite its name, Education for Ministry or EfM, is a program for regular folks (laity), not priests or clergy. The EfM program provides baptized people with the education to understand and carry out their personal ministry. The first EfM year studies and discusses the Old Testament, followed by a year on the New Testament, then Church History, and finally Theology. The Old Testament year is hardest: the EfM saying is that when you have finished Year 1, you are half done. EfM is a program of the University of the South (Sewanee, Tennessee).

EfM is one of the most profound classes I have ever taken.  It is helping me to ask better questions.

The Education for Ministry program began with a vision of enrolling a few hundred students. Within a few years it developed into a program reaching several thousand students with groups around the globe.

In addition to EfM groups throughout the USA, EfM can be found in Germany, Great Britian, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the Bahamas, Hong Kong, Italy, and Switzerland. Over 70,000 persons have participated in the program, and in the United States more than 22,000 have completed the full four years. The 2006 USA enrollment reached more than 8,000. More than eighty dioceses of the Episcopal Church as well as other denominations have contractual arrangements with EfM.

From The History and Scope of EfM

At the end of classes last Spring, our long-time EfM Mentor at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church (Saratoga, California) retired and I felt called to take the Mentor training to keep the class going. Last weekend, I completed my 18-hour training in Berkeley (on the campus of the School for Deacons and Church Divinity School of the Pacific) and our weekly class started to meet.

An EfM Mentor is not a teacher or a leader but rather a convener and group facilitator. Having designed and managed several mentoring programs where coaching and teaching were primary activities (including SEED Engineering mentoring, TechWomen, and MAGIC for Girls), it is interesting to be part of a different kind of mentoring as well as a Year 2 student.

EfM Education for Ministry class, Berkeley California 2011

Julian of Norwich icon School for Deacons . CDSP Berkeley CA

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Huawei Dragon Boat Pictures

Huawei Dragon Boat Crew 2011

One of my colleagues who formed the first dragon boat crew for Huawei in Santa Clara, California, asked me to post a blog entry with pictures. I wish I could have been at Treasure Island last Saturday – by all accounts, the 16th annual San Francisco International Dragon Boat Festival is a huge and fun party as well as a boat race. The Huawei dragon boat even made it into the finals!  I posted a picture of the Huawei team poster in Moon Cakes and Dragon Boats.

Huawei Dragon Boat Race 2011

Huawei Dragon Boat Race 2011

Images Copyright 2011 All rights reserved by NADC Huawei

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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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