Actress/Inventor Hedy Lamarr dies 194
No Such Agency writes "Wired News reports that Hedy Lamarr has died at the age of 86. Lamarr was not only a sex symbol and film star in the 30's-40's but also invented 'spread-spectrum' or frequency-hopping radio (with composer George Antheil). Originally intended to provide jamming-proof communications and remote torpedo control, the technology is one of the foundations of modern wireless communications, including wireless internet connections and GPS. Unfortunately their innovation was not appreciated until after their patent had expired. You can read more about Lamarr and spread-spectrum radio here."
cell phones (Score:1)
: )
(Score:1)
stealth TTB (Score:1)
was a thinker? you'd never know from her
film roles.
"That's Hedley!"
garyr
Obligatory dig at mainstream media (Score:2)
I would like to blast the mainstream media (and, I suppose, mainstream culture) for regarding acting as more worthy of attention than invention. This will all change after the Geek Revolution (heh).
Re:cell phones (Score:1)
Actually, that'd be 'she' rather than 'he'. Hedy was an actress. And no, I doubt she has much to do with the amount of power output a cell phone has and what that does to your noggin' as you jabber endlessly while driving down the freeway....
Seriously, I doubt people who use cell phones moderately (eg. for emergency calls, etc), rather than as a primary contact medium or as a way to 'chat with the {boys|girls|etc}' while driving down the road, will have few cancer issues.
On a different note, Blazing Saddles won't be quite the same for me now.
--Joe--
This is the essence... (Score:4)
Wanted: Hollywood starlets and composers to assist in next generation web development architecture. Must have interest in compression technology, just-in-time compilers and self modifying code. Large, firm breasts and/or
appreciation of Irving Berlin a plus. Competitive salaries, call today.
In all seriousness, I like this story in that is provides a (admittedly anecdotal) refutation to the frequently expressed opinion that only stereotypical geeks can contribute to technology. Some geeks have bulging biceps or a knack for (american) football. Some geeks are cute. Too many of us on
--Shoeboy
A toast.. (Score:2)
To Hedy Lamarr, the original, never-to-be forgotten, Tech Talking Babe.
TOYWAR [toywar.com]!!
Hot pics... (Score:2)
Hmm... many of them are black and white, like a statue....
AAAaaaaaaahhhhhhhhh (Score:1)
kwsNI
and the guy that did ballet mechanique! (Score:1)
I remember the 1989 Carnegie Hall
version. I don't remember it in any detail,
but I remember it kicked butt. We are not
talking a trivial film composer here.
but then I like Milton Babbit too.
garyr
Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
The orginal Techno-Talking Babe!(TM)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
One of those ideas... (Score:2)
Not sure if it's true, but sometimes the best inventions come from people who aren't knee deep in the problem already.
Tie-in to another article (Score:2)
An interesting person (Score:3)
Personally, I think Corel should pay for a permanent memorial to her, in recognition for her services both in entertainment AND technology. (Given Corel's extremely unpleasent treatment of her in the past, such as false allegations in order to overturn a lawsuit filed against them, it is the least they can do.)
I also think that there should be some kind of fund, linking not only Hedy Lamarr but other well-known female geeks, nerds and innovators, to go to educating women (kids, teachers and parents) that it's OK to think, OK to earn decent money whilst clothed & vertical, and VERY OK to be interested in technology.
Is this person's death -that- important? YES! The fewer role-models that can speak out, the less chance there is of change. And society, frankly, sucks. The average person seems to keep their brains at waist-height, and technology is something people avoid like the plague. (More than a few -blame- it for the plague.) We need people who can stand up and say that intelligence is OK, that we were born with brains, and they aren't just for decoration in gorefest movies.
Sadly, those who -do- think about high-tech think "big machines, big budgets, big teams, egg-heads on Penguin Mints, and Military Backing". They don't think "piano", which is how Hedy came up with the idea of shifting frequencies. They don't think "storms & a compass", which is how Marconi developed the radio. They don't think "growing cells" or "living beings", which were the roots behind Alan Turing's and Von Neuman's developments in computing.
In the end, I doubt anyone will do a damn thing, in memory of this ingenious lady, to improve education, or to improve women's standing in society. But there ya go. What can you expect?
Recruiting young starlets for secret projects (Score:2)
It isn't until they're in my secret laboratory, and have signed a non-disclosure agreement, that they realize I brought them there TO TURN THEM INTO GRANITE STATUES by means of an Open-source Patent-pending Method For Transforming Girls Into Granite Statues*
*patent pending
typo (Score:1)
Hey, wait a minute... (Score:1)
"You ever have that feeling where you're not sure if you're dreaming or awake?"
Hm. Hedy Lamarr Award? (Score:3)
Maybe a Slashdot Hedy Lamarr Award for the most outstanding contribution made by a woman in the last year?
Hey, it could work.
TOYWAR [toywar.com]!!
Re: (Score:2)
Hedy Lamarr: Life Lesson (Score:1)
God bless you, Hedy. You're missed
Other Links (Score:4)
Oh, sure, my submission about the passing of Ms. Lamarr gets rejected. Not that I'm bitter, mind you...
Anyway, the San Francisco Chronicle ran a story about her passing [sfgate.com], inclding some nic e photos [sfgate.com] of her. They also had an overview [sfgate.com] of her spread spectrum invention.
Hedy was also honored by the EFF with a Pioneer Award [eff.org] in 1997 for her spread spectrum work.
Schwab
Re:Recruiting young starlets for secret projects (Score:1)
You can't patent that you idiot! There's prior art:
When you reach the third level of Harkyn's Castle you will find a "Stone Sword." This turns any creature you encounter into stone. I haven't encountered any girls in Bard's Tale I, but I'm stalled on the second level of Mangars' Tower.
--Shoeboy
Re:This is the essence... (Score:1)
And the best part is, it mostly seems the feeling is mutual... (*grin)
--
Re:An interesting person (Score:2)
Dude...this is exactly the kind of ignorant, sexist garbage that keeps talented people from using their talents. (You do remember the parable of the talents, right?) If women using their God-given talents is against your religious code, then maybe you ought to re-think the way you worship.
I certainly hope your children don't grow up to resent you. Gods know if I had been raised to think the way you do, I'd end up bitter and angry at my own father as I came to the realization that the real world is completely different from what my father told me.
TOYWAR [toywar.com]!!
This is off-topic, but still in the spirit (Score:2)
"Hey, Tone; who'd you rather have sex with: Amelia Earhart or Betty Page?"
"Hank, I tell ya: Betty's got the package, right? Tits, abs, ass-she's built. But flyin' across the Atlantic solo? Man, that shit is hot."
In 2 years, it was by far the most well reasoned, least sexist thing I ever heard him say.
Tone would see the allure of Hedy, no problem. She's Betty's body with Amelia's soul.
Re:Hot pics... (Score:1)
Here [deltanet.com] is the picture for the statue freaks. Enjoy.
obligatory stab at a poorly written comment (Score:1)
Yay me!
Wish I had heard of her invention(s) before...
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
So besides being well over 50 years my senior and dead, she's probably not this geek guy's type.
Re:Patents (Score:1)
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
Is THAT who that is? I'll be damned, I never knew that! Thanks!
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:An interesting person (Score:1)
Oh...well...this explains everything.
Care for some tea? One lump or two?
TOYWAR [toywar.com]!!
Re:Hm. Hedy Lamarr Award? (Score:2)
I think Hedy Lamarr's contribution to technology was not (because of/in spite of/related to) her having XX chromosomes instead of XY. Instead, it was good instance of lateral thinking, getting an idea that kicks the struts out from under the core assumptions that so-called "experts" unthinkingly make when thinking about a problem.
If there's to be a proposition for a Hedy Lamarr award, why not make it for the person of any gender who's had the best out-of-left-field idea that made the most impact?
--
Re:Shouldn't that be "inventress" (Score:1)
Hedy Lamarr: Ace Spy (Score:3)
As the evening wore on, Lamarr began outlining her idea for a sophisticated antijamming device for use in radio-controlled torpedoes. If this seems out of character for a 26-year old film beauty, the fact is that not only did Lamarr possess a first-class mind but she also had listened to her husband's dinner-table business discussions with customers for his armaments. After all, Fritz Mandl's Hirtenberger Patronen-Fabrik had supplied much of the equipment Benito Mussolini used when his troops invaded Ethiopia in 1935.
Um.. Hedly Lamarr? (Score:1)
I've never put the two together before but the thought just popped in my head. Was this a coincedence or an homage?
-scuz me while I whip this out...
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:3)
http://www.corel.com/graphics/contests/jpg/0379
Excellent graphics work. That pic is amazing. It's been on Corel's boxes for a while now.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
The Hedy Lamarr Award for Lateral Thinking (Score:2)
Speaking of lateral thinking, that's a far better idea than the one I came up with. Hat's off to you.
How about it Slashdot? If you want I'll start developing products that we can sell...proceeds to go to the Hedy Lamarr Award for Lateral Thinking.
TOYWAR [toywar.com]!!
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:1)
Actually, she was partly recognized for tech. (Score:3)
Read about it here [wilan.com]
http://www.wilan.com/news/press/press23a.html
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:1)
There was quite a good story about her in Invention & Technology [americanheritage.com] a couple of years ago. Unfortunately, it doesn't appear to be archived.
You missed it! (Score:1)
She was also in the news in '98 when she sued Corel for using her picture on the CorelDraw box without permission.
--
Connection to Microsoft? :-) :-) :-) (Score:2)
She was married and divorced six times -- to
Could this lawyer be any relation to the Boies hired by the DoJ who did such a wonderful job against M$?
And moderators -- lighten up! laugh, it's funny!
:-)
--
Re:Um.. Hedly Lamarr? (Score:1)
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
Which was unauthorized. She sued [infoculture.cbc.ca] 'em and won too.
Blazing Saddles (Score:1)
;)
Arguably our last great heroine and patriot (Score:3)
After her accomplishments were turned over to the Government for the war effort, they did not welcome her into the halls of the nations think tanks.
Instead, they asked her to sell her sex appeal as a spokesmodel for the sale of U.S. war bonds.
Out of sheer patriotism, she did.
I'm just happy that she has started to recieve some of the respect that she's had coming for so long, and that the EFF was good enough to say 'thanks' while she was still alive.
Re:Um.. Hedly Lamarr? (Score:1)
Re:OPEN SOURCE HEDY LAMARR (Score:1)
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
And yeah, she sued. They've since resolved and she granted them a 5 year license. Details [corel.com] are available from Corel.
She was definently the original TTB (hey Nitrozac, was she inspiration?) and will be missed.
Re:Patents (Score:2)
If no one else can figure out how to solve a real problem, then one person figures out a solution, that's a real patentable idea. Sometimes it's hard to tell if it's a solution seeking a problem. But stupidly obvious stuff like saving your credit card info in a server indexed by username or cookie, is not worthy of a patent (even if some
If Hedy Lamarr had been in her prime at the launch of the Internet, she probably would have been a great contributor.
Re:OPEN SOURCE HEDY LAMARR (Score:1)
Bzzzt... wrong (Score:1)
Tesla invented this much earlier! (Score:4)
He invented radio, patented it, and in 1893 gave a lecture about it and published it free for everyone in the world to use. He was then totally ripped off by Marconi around the turn of the century when he made the first transatlantic broadcast using the exact same apparatus that Tesla had described in the paper he published.
At this time, Tesla was trying to push the government to adopt his system of wireless war machines that could do battle without having humans be sitting ducks inside them. He demonstrated a model boat at the world's fair that was not only wireless, but used spread spectrum techonology to encrypt its signal. Nobody, of course picked up on this.
He went on to invent radar and offered to build radar systems for the government in the late 1920's, but they refused, and were forced to play catchup in 1938 and develop their own radar system.
If you'd like some more information about Tesla, go check out this short article about his major achievements: http://home.nycap.rr.com/useless/ tesla/tesla.html [rr.com].
Tesla was not a crackpot, like a lot of people who know nothing about the man seem to think. This view was created by Thomas Edison who spent a large portion of his life trying to smash Tesla's image, and he ended up succeeding very well.
- Chris
Re:Hm. Hedy Lamarr Award? (Score:3)
Smart girls want and need to see examples of smart women identified and recognized.
Hmm. (Score:3)
There is Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum, Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum.. and I'm sure there are/will be others....
Freq. Hopping is when you shift carrier frequencies arond within the wider spectrum (hence, spread) that you are using.
Direct Sequence is a lot wierder (very closely tied in to CDMA... or rather, I think CDMA is an extension of DSSS). In direct sequency, you simply 'spread' the signal over the whole wide spectrum at once.... and the special way the signal is coded gives it redundancy, and makes it hide.
in FHSS, on a spectrum analyzer, a definite pattern of carriers on different frequencies shows up.. ina proper bell curve around the center frequency. (I think it's a bell.. something similar anyway).
in DSSS, on a spectrum analyzer, a 'plateau' is all you see.. with fuzz under it.
Re:One of those ideas... (Score:2)
Re:Um.. Hedly Lamarr? (Score:1)
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:1)
And don't forget Jayne Mansfield, who reputedly had the "highest IQ in Hollywood" in her time... somewhere in the 180s, IIRC.
So why didn't she in her spare time invent side-looking radar or something like that? She was a pragmatist and decided that making movies was an easier way to get rich... Hey Lamarr never made a dime from her invention...
Re:E-mail me if you have any questions (Score:1)
Her Partner was ahead of his time, too! (Score:2)
Re:E-mail me if you have any questions (Score:1)
Another take... (Score:2)
Here's a link from before she died...
MIT Inventors [mit.edu]
Now, the Forbes article was pretty good. I can understand how someone with her background could help out on an idea like this, but she certainly didn't invent it outright, which is what the Wired article sounds like. Maybe we could have gotten the full story before, but she's dead now, and let the media make a story about it all they want, they always do...
---
pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [152.7.41.11].
Re:An interesting person (Score:1)
1. I'd be willing to bet that the original poster is just a troll, not a sexist, you're probably wasting your breath
2. The parable of the talents has nothing to do with talents as we know them: the talents referred to in the parable are a form of currency.
A toast.. (and a picture) (Score:2)
(perhaps Ada Lovelace was the penultimate original tech talking babe, but can't forget Nitrozac either .. oh my)
Yup. (Score:2)
Tesla was, however, very eccentric which didn't help his image any.
Re:Bzzzt... wrong (Score:1)
Re:Recruiting young starlets for secret projects (Score:1)
When you reach the third level of Harkyn's Castle...
Not to mention the work of one Dr. Frankenfurter. There is no explicit documentary evidence that Frankenfurter's machine could do granite, per se, but I doubt that porting the mechanism would be difficult in comparison to the task of handling the conversion itself.
Furthermore, it strikes me that granite may not be the ideal material for petrifying naked young women; I am thinking, here, of the frictional elements and the consistency of "skin" tone. A white marble or perhaps a nice glossy black volcanic would likely be more pleasing to the touch and the eyes.
wow (Score:1)
Someone posts to slashdot with a link to "hot pics" of said person, and gets a score+1 informative?
"Subtle Mind control? why do html buttons say submit?",
Re:Why doesn't the Bible say.... (Score:2)
dave
"Hard Limit Reached" (Score:1)
The hard transfer limit for this user has been reached
Not everyone has a site that can be slashdotted. Not everyone can afford it. I think in this case, someone has web hosting with limits, and we exceeded them.
A page that is probably lucky to get maybe a few hundred hits a month has probably been hit more tonight then it has in it's entire existance. In this case, some person's content may be totally inaccessable to others until their next billing period, which is sad.
Slashdot needs to remember this before linking a url in an article like that.
Problem is, I don't have a solution. Any suggestions?
Hedy Lamarr's nude scene (Score:3)
And if it doesn't disturb you to ogle the body of someone who is now dead, you should perhaps reconsider. And if you find it disturbing that someone posted this comment, then you're probably right.
Re:Hedy Lamarr's nude scene (Score:1)
Actually, what was probably most shocking was that she wasn't merely displayed clearly nude in the water (as seen on the photograph), but also on land. She wanders around a bit, walks over a meadow and caresses a horse, all in the nude, though with a gauze. Innocent beauty.
Worship Chan as a Man not a Deity (Score:1)
Actor or Actress? (Score:1)
She was an actress in the 1930s-50s, and that's what they said back then.
Re:Tesla invented this much earlier! (Score:1)
--
GroundAndPound.com [groundandpound.com] News and info for martial artists of all styles.
Re:"Hard Limit Reached" (Score:1)
Hedy Lammarr Website (Score:1)
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
Re:An interesting person (Score:1)
Re:Hmm. (Score:3)
Frequency hopping found its main application in military anti-jam links, just as Lamarr envisioned. It is also used in some (but not all) Part 15 wireless LANs.
The spread spectrum used in GPS and in CDMA cell phones is the *other* form of spread spectrum, direct sequence. Lamarr did not invent this.
Both forms of spread spectrum can appear as featureless wideband noise signals. They are generally flat across their bandwidth, though this can be affected by filtering. Frequency hopped systems can be programmed to avoid certain channels, thus punching "holes" in the spectrum. An IS-95 CDMA cellular signal, which uses direct sequence, is 1.25 MHz wide, and on a spectrum analyzer it bears a close resemblance to the top of Bart Simpson's head due to the filtering in the transmitter. From the early days of CDMA development at Qualcomm we called this a "Bart's head" signal.
Just keep laughing (Score:2)
Vovida, OS VoIP
Beer recipe: free! #Source
Cold pints: $2 #Product
What about Sharon Stone and Jodie Foster? (Score:1)
What are they inventing?
But probably you can make much more money in world-class acting vs. inventing now than in the 30s.
--
Patents, Hedy, George, possibilities, and Slashdot (Score:5)
The story of the "Secret Communications System" patent is truly one of the most incredible stories I've ever heard, (wouldn't it make a great film?) and a look at the patent is a real eye-opener for people who are familiar with modern digital technology.. Why? Because the design was for a digital system built with analog components..
And the person who said that Hedy and George had given their patent to the government in hopes of helping to stop Hitler was right..Hedy had seen facists and facism at close hand.. and so had my father, and they both knew what was at stake..
in spite of this, Hedy was still looked at suspiciously as an "enemy alien" by some.. :(
She was married off by her family when she was stillin her teens, and was kept virtual prisoner in Austria as a "trophy bride" of the Austrian arms magnate Fritz Mandel a few years before the war, and she literally had to drug a maid in order to flee..
While being forced to sit at the dinner table with her husband and his facist friends, who included high-ranking Nazi military officials, she built up a knowledge of military technology and carried that with her when she fled to London. (where Samuel Goldwyn, I think, gave her a ticket to the US) She met my father at a party at Janet Gaynor's house, and asked him if he could help her turn what was then a valid, but unformed idea into something that could work..(My father had a reputation in Hollywood as an experimental musician and as somebody who was familiar with the latest in technology..)
It took them about six months to do the whole process, and the patent is really interesting.
Hedy and George never made a penny from the patent, which was really unjust, I think, because the government had classified it as "Top Secret" and made the commercial utilization of the invention difficult. Just after the patent expired, in 1960, it began to see commercial use..(in the Cuban Missle Crisis) Its now the main secure communications technology in use in Milstar, the US govt's 25 billion dollar "survivable" satellite communications system. Spread Spectrum is, in addition to being an incredibly efficient way to send data, inherently secure.. (one needs to know the code, in order to read the message..or usually, even know a message exists..)
By the way, spread spectrum holds out another possibility with startling implications.. It could be used to create a new television and/or radio broadcasting service that would be able to, in any given geographic area, accomodate the broadcast of many, many more channels of information, at higher quality, than we have now, eliminating scarcity on the airwaves and the battles over bandwidth .. Just imagine, community radio, community television, creativity, true democracy of the airwaves, and perhaps, even, no need for a license to broadcast..and no more canned satellite shows..
That possibility scares some interests tremendously. And its something worth fighting for.
They have digital radio in Europe, why not here?
Guess why...
Anyway, my father died about six weeks after I was born, so I never knew him.. But I definitely did inherit his interest in communications technology...and music..and now that I know the real story, I'm very proud of him..
Now if only I could only get my only two relatives on this planet to stop saying I'm "blackmailing" them for simply being open about my father..(Its a generational thing, I guess. my mother and father weren't married, big deal..)
By the way, thanks for an excellent site, I read it almost every day..
Chris Beaumont
chris@ncafe.com [mailto]
Arrested! (Score:1)
Had she used her genius for Good!
--
To moderators: Informative (Score:1)
But I couldn't see it, even the cached page at Google.
--
Re:Techno-Talking Babe (Score:2)
That's par for the course, in Hollywood
as well as a minor criminal record
Imagine her as a sad lonely old lady. It's not that surprising really. There have been quite a few cases of faded stars getting caught shoplifting. Some say it's a subconsciously-driven attempt to get attention.
So besides being well over 50 years my senior and dead, she's probably not this geek guy's type
Yeah, but a decent geek husband might have saved her from all that.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:Um.. Hedly Lamarr? (Score:1)
(another shameless quote from Blazing Saddles)
--
Never happen today (Score:3)
lady after my own heart! (Score:1)
'bout time if you ask me
Re:Hm. Hedy Lamarr Award? (Score:1)
I'd like to see intelligent women honoured. I'd kill to know who's doing what in which field. I'd like to hear all of the things I normally do - just with 'she' instead of 'he' once in awhile.
-Noiz,
Who is used to being outnumbered, but would like to not be sometimes.
---------
Re:An interesting person (Score:1)
Re:Hey, wait a minute... (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory dig at mainstream media (Score:1)
True,
I just saw an NBC report, and it was quite extensive, but it said nothing about her being an inventor. This is very sad.
Nitrozac is fed up. (Score:2)
For the first time in about 2 months I checked out the comments here because I've been getting a ton of email to check out this story. I'm furious at the sheer amount of the stone posts, I just don't think the moderation is clearing them out fast enough. I think Slashdot should ban the IPs of these abusers, because in essence if you just leave them to post, you're pushing away the many intelligent women who would like to be a part of this community, including myself.
These petrified posts, assault women, they're cleary mysogynist. I think the intent is to drive away women. It's a good way to turn
I understand that freedom of speech is important, but wouldn't you want IPs to be banned if they spewed racist hate? Why does
And she's not the only one (Score:2)
Just read Telsa Cox's diary [linux.org.uk] page (and here [linux.org.uk])to see what she thinks about Slashdot.
Naked and Petrified posts are ruining Slashdot.
Re:Nitrozac is fed up. (Score:2)
I agree those posts are the worst thing on Slashdot. We should try to get rid of them. But, banning IP's is a bad idea. People can change their IPs, and sometimes many people can be behind the same IP.
I think that allowing posting only by logged in users is a good idea. However, logged in people should still be able to post anonymously - but moderation of their anonymous comments should still apply to them. I also like the idea of people temporarily losing the right to post every time they get moderated down to -1. That would get rid of a lot of the petrified stuff, and would be nice.
But mainly, I think Slashdot works ok. It's certainly better then the newsgroups, which I gave up on six years ago. In the meantime, I think you need to change your viewing options. Aren't the default viewing options +2? If not, I certainly think they should be. We don't want new users to see all the crap unless they want to.
And I like your comic strip, by the way.
Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
Re:Nitrozac is fed up. (Score:2)
What to do about it? Ban the IP's? If they're from some large proxy server, this causes a lot of collateral damage. I favor the idea of giving moderators renewable (based on prompt meta-moderation) points for "off-topic", "redundant" and perhaps a new category of "hateful" down-moderations, combined with some auto-moderation which kicks things down based on all the boring and repetetive key-phrases most of us have come to hate. If "naked and petrified" automatically posts at -1 (Offtopic), moderators don't have to waste any time at all.
--
Solution proposal (Score:2)
This is a two step proposal. One step is trival. The second takes a lot of work.
One possible abuse: moderators who disagree with someone's comments can abuse the "Naked and Petrified" option. Blip their comments are never seen again, until meta-moderation, and then the moderator loses only one karma point. I'm not sure how to fix this except to up the karma penalty for an unfair "Naked and Petrified" post to -5.
TOYWAR [toywar.com]!!
Re:Hm. Hedy Lamarr Award? (Score:2)
IMHO, smart girls seeing smart women identified and recognized in the same context as smart men would learn more about equality than if there was a special "Miss Intelligent" contest.
So, yes, traditionally women are terribly under-represented and -recognized in technical fields, but making a separate category of recognition gives the subtle message that the rules are different for different genders, which (I thought) was the message we're trying to avoid.
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Re:Hm. Hedy Lamarr Award? (Score:2)
The day that as much as 40% of the "left field" award goes to women would be the day that I would subscribe to your 'gender-blind' model.
The fact that the preponderance of the announcements of Hedy's death don't mention her intellectual accomplishments is an indication to me that we can't pretend a level playing field exists.