Code: Debugging the Gender Gap (2016)

1h 20m
Running Time

January 28, 2016
Release Date

Code: Debugging the Gender Gap (2016)

1h 20m
Running Time

January 28, 2016
Release Date

External Links & Social Media
Watch Code: Debugging the Gender Gap Trailer

Plot.

At a time in the United States when the tech sector outpaces the overall growth of the employment market, CODE asks the important question: Where are all the women?

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Currently Code: Debugging the Gender Gap is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Apple TV, Google Play Movies, YouTube, Amazon Video, fuboTV, Fandango At Home, Crackle, The Roku Channel

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🇺🇸 United States

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Details.

Release Date
January 28, 2016

Status
Released

Running Time
1h 20m

Genres

Last updated:

This Movie Is About.

woman director
computer scientist

Wiki.

CODE: Debugging the Gender Gap is a 2015 documentary by Robin Hauser Reynolds. It focuses on the lack of women and minorities in the field of software engineering. It premiered on April 19, 2015 at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. The film focuses on inspiring young girls to pursue careers in computer science by profiling successful women in computer programming, such as, Danielle Feinberg of Pixar, Aliya Rahman of Code for Progress, and Julie Ann Horvath. By profiling and displaying the careers of these women, the film makers hope to show that computer science can be creative, lucrative, and rewarding.The film traces the history of women in the U.S. technology industries, from the work of Ada Lovelace, Grace Hopper, and the women of ENIAC. It then follows the decline of women graduates in mathematics and computer science during the 1980s, linking the phenomenon to the release of the 1983 film WarGames, and a cultural shift that depicted men and boys as technology workers, and increasing hostility for women and girls in the tech industries. Additionally, the film highlights the work of women in the field, by featuring interviews with women in the tech industry, such as Kimberly Bryant (founder of Black Girls Code), Debbie Sterling (founder of GoldieBlox), Maria Klawe (president of Harvey Mudd College), and Danielle Feinberg (director of photography at Pixar).

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