10 Black Women Making Major Moves in Tech
These remarkable influencers are shaking up the industry!
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Techie Ladies - In honor of Women’s History Month, we’re featuring 10 remarkable individuals who are not only blazing innovative paths throughout the field of technology, but also making a point of ushering in younger generations to create a more diverse and prosperous industry. — Patrice Peck(Photos from Left: Jenna Wortham via Instagram, Jemal Countess/Getty Images for TIME, San Jose Mercury News/ MCT /Landov)
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Jenna Wortham - As a technology reporter and columnist at the New York Times and staff writer at New York Times Magazine, Jenna Wortham has become known for the best and brightest articles on start-ups and digital culture. Case in point: her two most recent stories spotlight a new web series led by a Jamaican-British millennial and the underground web culture of “shipping.” "As a columnist, Jenna has been a great synthesizer of the ideas, trends, memes, and imagery that swarm through our collective mind, someone who can be counted on to rove widely and perceptively through the digital terrain,” New York Times Magazine editor Jake Silverstein said.(Photo: Jenna Wortham via Instagram)
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Jewel Burks - Jewel Burks (center) is the co-founder of PartPic, which facilitates search and purchase of maintenance and repair parts. The Howard University graduate started her career at Google and McMaster Carr Industrial Supply before recognizing an opportunity to create PartPic, a tech solution for problems faced by purchasers of industrial supplies. "It is still frustrating knowing that Partpic has defensible technology, huge market potential, a qualified team and we have had such a hard time with fundraising, but I don’t get discouraged because I have faith we will make it,” Burks told MadameNoire. "I’m also fortunate because I’m in a unique position to participate in and change the narrative about diversity in tech so that it won’t be as hard for the people of color coming up next."(Photo: Jewel Burks via Twitter)
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Kathryn Finney - When the White House taps you for the Champion of Change Award, chances are you’re doing something right. Digital Undivided founder Kathryn Finney received the honor in 2013 for her work increasing inclusion in the tech industry. When she’s not finding, supporting, and training urban tech entrepreneurs through her social enterprise, Finney is delivering keynote speeches at #FOCUS100, South by Southwest and other top conferences. She also recently unveiled ProjectDiane, a venture aiming to disrupt pattern-matching in tech by identifying black women founders of tech enabled companies. (Photo: Taylor Hill/Getty Images)
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Shirley Ann Jackson - To call Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson a trailblazer would be an understatement. Among her many pioneering accomplishments, the theoretical physicist is the first African-American woman to receive a doctorate from MIT (in any field) and the first African-American woman to lead a top-ranked research university. As the 18th president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Dr. Jackson has led an extraordinary transformation of the oldest technological research university in the United States. "The advice I give to young people is fundamentally to not let others put limits on who you think you can be, to not put limits on them, and to understand and to believe that all of us have talents and have things to contribute,” she told NPR.(Photo: Jemal Countess/Getty Images for TIME)
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