The Mothers of Invention: Women Who Blazed the Trail in Technology

The Mothers of Invention: Women Who Blazed the Trail in Technology


It’s easy to imagine where we would be without women in technology.


We’d be poorer for it.


With Mother’s Day upon us, I couldn’t help but think once more about the stark employment figures I shared in my International Women’s Day blog just a few weeks ago. Millions of women have involuntarily left the workforce at a much higher rate than men during the pandemic—with roughly one third of women in the U.S. aged 25-44 citing that childcare was the reason for that unemployment.


Reflecting on this further, I thought about the women in technology who’ve left their positions during this past year. It’s a loss of talent and capability that’s set back decades of advances by trailblazing women who not only shine in their field yet also do so in male-dominated realms of study, research, and employment.


So as we look ahead to recovery, we should also look back. By celebrating just a few of the women in technology who shaped our world today, women who truly are “mothers of invention,” perhaps we can remember just how vital women are in our field—and how we should double down on our efforts to welcome them back.


Margaret Hamilton—The software that ran the moon landing


Imagine a time when the term “software engineering” wasn’t recognized, even though it was crucial to us landing on the moon.


Such were the days when Margaret Hamilton began her work at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) as a job to support her family wh ..

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