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Intel Businesses Technology

Intel Report Shows Tech Companies Still Struggle With Diversity (axios.com) 354

Intel became the latest tech company to report diversity statistics Tuesday, sharing a mixed bag of annual numbers that included small gains in some areas, relatively flat numbers of Black employees and a decline in female representation in the U.S. Axios reports: Women made up a bit more than a quarter of Intel's employee headcount, seeing a tiny drop in the U.S. compared to last year and a similarly minuscule increase over the same period for Intel's total global workforce. The percentage of underrepresented minorities in the U.S. workforce ticked up by a fraction of a percentage point, coming in at just over 16%. African American representation was flat at 4.9%.

"It may be slower than we would like but at least the conversation is on the table," Intel's interim chief diversity and inclusion officer Dawn Jones told Axios. Intel's inability to significantly boost the diversity of its workforce is far from unique in the industry. Intel wants to set up an industry-wide effort that would work to help standardize ways of measuring different diversity statistics from one company to another.

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Intel Report Shows Tech Companies Still Struggle With Diversity

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  • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:11PM (#60835852)

    Imagine that your doctor graduated based on "diversity" and not merit. Is that really who you want treating you?

    Now apply this to hardware -- is that really who you want working on designing the next CPU? Someone who got in based on the color their skin and not based on their skill?

    What is this nonsense -- The Verge ?

    • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:24PM (#60835900)
      This is virtue signaling in the modern world. Some traits that express themselves differently (based on biological role that has evolved over the course of millions of years) between genders and sub-species groups will lend themselves to be better or worse than other traits at some professions. There is nothing wrong with that. We are all different and unique. This used to be viewed as the beauty in humanity, the incredible diversity.

      Just like some horses are fantastic racers, and some can draw a carriage, some can prance sideways, etc... some cultures have focused on, and selected individuals based on criteria that others haven't. No big deal. The free market will guide each person to their natural path. You don't find "gender and diversity" issues in the NFL, the Army, or the fishing industry. Why should we look at chip designers differently? They are predominantly male because... well men have thinking styles and traits that are probably better suited to that kind of work. Nothing wrong with that. Honestly this bullshit is exhausting. I don't want to read about it anymore, its not important! Show me a sexist woman-abusing pig in one of those companies, and then we can have a discussion about what's wrong with the world!
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Some traits that express themselves differently (based on biological role that has evolved over the course of millions of years) between genders and sub-species groups will lend themselves to be better or worse than other traits at some professions

        Be warned, you've treaded into the territory James Damore was accused of going into, yet at worst he wrote about different interests between the sexes, not necessarily their aptitude at this or that on the whole.

        Just like some horses are fantastic racers, and some

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:30PM (#60835914)

      This is NuSlashdot: News For SJWs. Stuff And Nonsense.

    • by AbRASiON ( 589899 ) * on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:36PM (#60835930) Journal

      Notice the posting, as usual, BeauHD, politics before science and technology.

      He really needs to head off to Polygon / Verge etc

    • at the end of the day you get more money and a better title so you do not refuse it

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by godrik ( 1287354 )

      Do we need to haave this conversation EVERY time?

      I don't think any one is talking about hiring someone for the color of their skin or their gender identity. Measuring the problem and recognizing there is a problem is the first step toward solving the problem. Some thoughts:

      it is important for an organization to have a workforce that somewhat represent the demographics of its customer and of the country where it is set. If there are issues that affect women primarily, it is more likely that women would care

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Measuring the problem and recognizing there is a problem is the first step toward solving the problem.

        What problem?

        it is important for an organization to have a workforce that somewhat represent the demographics of its customer and of the country where it is set.

        Why? Are such organizations more profitable? Are they more long lived? Is the quality of their products measurably better?

        If there are issues that affect women primarily, it is more likely that women would care and attempt to solve these issues. As such, if you have no women (or not enough women) in your ranks, then the organization may fail to recognize problems, solutions, and opportunities.

        You say the organization "may" fail...is there any data suggesting failure actually happens? Shouldn't we be able to look at similar companies in similar markets and see a measurable difference if one company's workforce is more or less "diverse"?

        It is also important to recognize that your interview process is not 100 accurate. During the interview process you try to estimate who is going to be a good fit for the position. But you never actually pick the best person for the position because there is a discrepancy between perception of "quality" and the actual "quality" of the employee. In my experience, the difference is large and not small. So if you get to the point where you have two candidates that seem to be close in perceived quality, you may want to prefer the one from an underrepresented group at your institution. The problem of hiring a diverse workforce is also linked to your applicant pool. It turns out that if you seek explicitly applications from a particular demographic, then you do find qualified prospect in that group. What happens often is that they have a somewhat different profiles than the rest of the company and because of that, they get culled early in the process. A typical example may be that recruiters may not be as familiar with HBCU or women's college. They train their students damn well. But because most applicants are from top ivy league schools, the HBCU's and women's college applicants get passed on. A fundamental problem is simply that there aren't that many african american (for instance) who graduate with a CS degree nation wide. So your statistics at big companies are going to reflect that. Intel does have efforts to try to improve education in general. But changes is slow. In my university, students that are african american (once again for instance) tend to come to lower resource zip codes. Which means they come from under resources high schools, with no AP math classes, poor math skills, usually no CS class in high school, and definitely no AP CS opportunities. That is a hard problem to tackle in the US because school funding has been linked to property taxes which mean richer districts gets more funds than poorer ones. Since public education is extremely evil communist satanic completely unreasonable expense and opposed to American Ideals(TM), the poor school districts don't get 5% of the resources they would need to fix this problem.

        Blah blah blah. Give me a valid BUSINESS reason why I shouldn't advertise a position as widely as possible, then select the b

      • Not the country, its customer base, sure. You cant expect Lamborghini to be diversified then, if 90% of its customers are men.
      • So if you get to the point where you have two candidates that seem to be close in perceived quality, you may want to prefer the one from an underrepresented group at your institution.

        Indeed, if you wish to violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, you might want to make race-based employment decisions.

        typical example may be that recruiters may not be as familiar with HBCU or women's college. They train their students damn well.

        Well, no. When one large tech company looked into this, they found the HBCUs

      • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @12:30AM (#60836242)

        So if you get to the point where you have two candidates that seem to be close in perceived quality, you may want to prefer the one from an underrepresented group at your institution.

        And hiring based on race is racist. There is no such thing as "reverse racism", there is only racism.

        I'll see this all the time where employers will claim to be "equal opportunity employer" and "affirmative action employer", but this is impossible as the two are mutually exclusive. Either you hire without regard to race or you prefer those from one race over that of another.

        And then there is this...

        As such, if you have no women (or not enough women) in your ranks, then the organization may fail to recognize problems, solutions, and opportunities.

        What utter bullshit. If you cannot give a specific example on how a woman might be better with a piece of code or portion of logic over that of a man then this is just diversity virtue signalling. If you want good engineering then hire good engineers.

        That is a hard problem to tackle in the US because school funding has been linked to property taxes which mean richer districts gets more funds than poorer ones.

        So, you are equating race with social status? How racist of you. Not every Christian heterosexual white male was brought up by an upper middle class family with two parents in an above average school district.

        If people want to see an end to racism and sexism then here's an idea, leave race and sex out of your hiring decisions.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Can you at least agree though that if an employer really was equal opportunity then the make-up of their workforce would reflect the make-up of society?

          • Why would this be a desirable outcome? If a group of people has an affinity for a particular task, we'd expect to see an over-representation of that group in a company that requires said task as part of its business. Different groups of people have slightly different interests. These differences get bigger at the tails of the distibution. It's completely okay to have more of a certain group if that is in line with their interests and everyone has equal opportunity to pursue their interests.
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              It depends why you think different groups of people have an affinity for a particular task. For example men are massively under-represented in primary teaching (under 12s) and in nursing. I think the reasons for that are bad and should be addressed because they hurt men and are not some kind of biological imperative or anything like that, but you may disagree.

          • Oh hell no. Different cultures have unique value systems, which means certain jobs are admired and sought after, while others are looked down upon and avoided, and it varies from culture to culture, race to race, locality to locality. Gender based preferences for certain behaviours manifest in humans before they even learn to speak, and every study agrees that the more free people are to choose what they want to do in life, the larger this preference gap between the sexes becomes.

            On the contrary, if a com

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              So what you are saying is that no employer is really equal opportunity because the candidate pool is already biased by cultural and gender biases. I agree.

              But do you not agree that it's valid to try to address those biases? Or is it up to someone other than the employer, or do we just do nothing? Or are they not an issue at all to you?

      • by ewibble ( 1655195 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @12:53AM (#60836280)

        Do we need to haave this conversation EVERY time?

        No we should all just agree with you.

        Just because you can measure something doesn't make it a problem. What is necessarily wrong with not having equal distribution of people in the work force. Sure women will probably have a different point of view, and priorities but have somewhere close to 50% is not some magical number at which this occurs.

        The problem here is women in general don't want to work in IT, this is demonstrated by other high end professions such as lawyers, and doctors where they catching up or even surpassing men. Women are quite capable doing all these jobs and nothing is stopping them, they simply don't seem to want to do them. In countries with greater choice they still don't go into IT. Why should society dictate what people should do with their lives just to get the number to be equal.

        Perhaps we should start imprisoning more women and white people just get the numbers even. Or maybe there is a disproportionate number of gay people in the entertainment industry perhaps we should even that out.

        While I agree that these stats may indicate a problem, they definitely don't mean there is one. All it means is we should look further and find the root cause, and maybe those cause are acceptable, like women just don't enjoy that type of work as much. Not try to massage the numbers so we all look like good little people. But that is hard, its easier just to appear equal, form over substance.

        • All it means is we should look further and find the root cause

          I wish people would do that more often.

          • All it means is we should look further and find the root cause

            We know the root cause. It is an educational disparity problem.

            This is not something that new HR guidelines can fix in two years. This is something that will require educational reform and a decade or more to fix.

      • Women are not interested in IT fields except by small percentages. There is nothing stopping men from becoming nurses, and yet their population among nurses makes 25% seem astronomically large. Women by majority, are turned off by tech. Try getting laid sometime by going to a bar and sounding excited by the new breakthroughs in NVME storage. I am not saying it is impossible, but damn your odds are not good.

    • by LenKagetsu ( 6196102 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @02:23AM (#60836380)

      Black doctors get a bonus to their scores, asian ones get a penalty.

      This is racism. End of fucking story. No amount of whippings, lynchings, jim crow laws, projects, ghettos, or other raw deals handed to black people justifies this, especially with how Japanese-Americans were treated during WW2.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Is this actually true? Do you have a citation?

        I've seen cases where some people from disadvantages backgrounds get help to access university courses, but ultimately they have to pass the same exams (marked anonymously) as everyone else.

        • Adversity scores are what I'm talking about, they were held to a lower standard and given chances that someone of a different race would be denied despite having the same or better scores on SATs and similar. If people can pass with lower standards to enter, then your standards are inflated.

        • Harvard/Yale/Princeton have openly admitted it in court filings while denying it is wrong to do so. US Govt has lawsuits over this going on.
    • by nut ( 19435 )

      Imagine that your doctor graduated based on "diversity" and not merit. Is that really who you want treating you?

      You think that's a joke. Students in NZ gain entry to medical school with vastly different exam results, based on attributes such as race, refugee status, rural schooling, "lower socio-economic" categories, etc.

      If you're white or asian from a major city you would have to average 95% on entrance examinations. If you're maori or pasifika you might get in with a 70% average on the same exams.

    • I dont have the exact numbers but women decimate men in the nursing positions. Why do we never hear about the fact that the nursing career is over 95% women?

      It isnt that women WANT jobs in Tech fields and are being squeezed out. Its that maybe 25%, if your lucky, are tech minded in the first place. If you dont believe me, try talking techie talk when trying to hook up at a bar. Thats a quick lesson on how NOT to get laid. You might find someone, but the odds are higher if you stick to other topics. If talki

    • ORIGINALLY (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Stoutlimb ( 143245 )

      The original reason why diversity was thought to be good, is that it brings new points of view to a mono-culture. Someone raised in the Sahara may have a very different mindset, which corresponds to some unique tools for problem solving. This helps the group.

      That doesn't happen anymore, because with strict leftist ideology dominating, everyone now is supposed to think the exact same way (or get cancelled). Even though everyone may look different from each other, the benefits of diversity of thought are l

  • by Ritz_Just_Ritz ( 883997 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:12PM (#60835856)

    Are you fucking kidding me?

    Go to any tech firm of consequence and take a good look. You see a plethora of white and Indian men and a very small number of "everyone else".

    There isn't even the pretense of trying to hide it.

    Tired of the status quo? Incent your employees to bring in folks that the recruiters can't seem to find. Call me crazy, but I seem to recall there being PLENTY of women and other diverse folks in my engineering school. Just sayin....those folks didn't just vanish from the workforce.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by saloomy ( 2817221 )
      No, they didn't vanish. They work. You think Intel is purposefully saying to itself "golly gee, lets just hire men, irrespective of the productivity levels or output we get from them vs women. Nevermind that whole competitiveness garbage. We think the world should see women in aprons in the kitchen and thats that!"? NO! Of course it isn't. They likely hire based on merit and availability of candidates. Go dig up the gender spread on applicants, group them by qualifications, and show me where they are dispro
      • I came to say about the same. Look at the applicants. You can't hire people that don't apply.

        • The problem is that a noisy minority has been able to convince just about every normal American that if a certain race or gender isn't applying enough, it's because of racism or sexism. Unless it's white men who are under-represented, then they are doing it to themselves.

          This laughably childish concept of what's going on in the work place is the actual mentality of your average American, including top CEO's and politicians. I'm sure some don't honestly believe this tripe, but because we've built ourselves

    • by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:36PM (#60835932) Homepage

      Call me crazy, but I seem to recall there being PLENTY of women and other diverse folks in my engineering school. Just sayin....those folks didn't just vanish from the workforce.

      I am not sure about more recent years, but when I entered college in the fall of 1995, there were seven women in the CS program and roughly 100 men. One of the women switched majors to English after one semester. I'm not sure how many others graduated with CS degrees.

      Most of the engineering programs (electrical and computer engineering excluded) had a higher proportion of women. But chemical, mechanical, and civil engineers don't show up in the kind of firms that are covered on Slashdot. They got hired instead by companies like ExxonMobil, Air Products, auto manufacturers (or their OEMs), and so forth.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:47PM (#60835970) Journal

        I don't understand the push to hire women, it seems like the wrong place to emphasize things. If the pool of available female candidates is size X, then the industry will never be able to hire more than X candidates who can do the job.

        If you want more women in software, you need to convince them to pursue that career path in the first place, either through college, coder bootcamps, or self-teaching. Logically there's not a lot else that will change the ratio of men to women.

        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          Hiring is part of the problem -- a good manager should reach out to as many qualified candidates as possible. My opinion is that it is, however, a relatively small part of the problem. More of the problem has to do with other workplace dynamics: Usually things that are not explicitly or intentionally sexist or racist, but which still filter workers so that fewer women or minorities stick around. Those are a lot harder to address than initial hiring.

          (Explicit or intentionally sexist or racist dynamics are

          • We admitted that long hours were common,

            ok that's a human problem, your company was sick.

            • by Entrope ( 68843 )

              You have no idea what that company was like. It was far more healthy when people were working long hours than after it got bought by a large multinational.

              At the latter point, long hours were extremely rare, but the upper management was different and too many of them were dysfunctional. For example, one of the dysfunctional managers decreed that no engineer was allowed to take vacation until product X shipped, even if they were a software person and the software was done, just waiting on mechanical or har

        • by Octorian ( 14086 )

          I've often felt that if the "big companies that get the news articles" did everything and anything possible to get to the desired gender ratio, regardless of how far they had to lower the bar and incentivize candidates, you know what would likely happen? The entire rest of the industry would likely wind up being 99.9% male.

          We spend so much time beating up "big tech" over this, while completely ignoring "little tech." When the overall pool is this tiny, fixing one ends up hurting the other. Unfortunately, fi

      • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @11:24PM (#60836152)

        I had roughly the same experience in college, around the same time. Very few women in the EE/CS classes.

        Frankly, the notion that there's some nationwide conspiracy to avoid hiring female programmers is ridiculous. I work on videogames, so the teams I'm on have lots of designers, writers, artists, animations, producers, etc, all with plenty of females in them. The only teams that tended to be hugely imbalanced towards males were the programming teams. And this happened at EVERY company.

        There's really only one reasonable explanation for this, but too many people are wedded to some ridiculous conspiracy theory about how women are somehow being pushed out of the field. Or, they'll say that these companies are being unintentionally racist or sexist, which still really doesn't explain the companies I've worked at, who manage to hire plenty of diverse candidates in every department except one.

        But of course, it's not very PC to suggest that men and women may be wired in fundamentally different ways. So giant corporations still pretend that they need to meet some artificial quota of hires, regardless of who is applying, as though the imbalance of applicants is somehow their fault.

      • When I went to college from 89 to 95 for pharmacy, my class was two thirds women. This ratio was reflected in the work environment as well. The women I worked with were well suited for the job and many of the excelled. Pharmacy is a great gig, paying over six figures.

        How come we don't see anyone complaining about the lack of diversity in Pharmacy?

        Maybe we should be forcing these smart and talented women to move over to computer science careers instead, just to make sure we don't have any obviously unfair im

    • PLENTY of women and other diverse folks in my engineering school. Just sayin....those folks didn't just vanish from the workforce.

      They didn't leave the workforce, but many of them left engineering.

      Why do women leave engineering? [mit.edu]

  • At the linked report, the photo at the top right only has 1 White guy. This is not diversity and inclusion. If you don't like what I said, then why does Intel even bother making such reports?

  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:16PM (#60835870) Journal

    Does anybody know what it's like working for Intel, what kinds of hours most people out in, whether it's high-stress?

    I've noticed that the most easy-going organizations I've worked in, where people put in their 40 hours (or a little less) but didn't worry too much about it, had majority female employees, or close to it. Conversely, the 60-80 hours cut throat "crunch time all the time" places didn't seem to have a lot of women who wanted to put up with that bullshit^H^H^H^H^H^H environment.

    That's just my personal experience, though, a small sample. Have others noticed the same thing, are more men stupid/hard-working enough to deal with that?

    Seriously you could call it "stupid to put up with a company's bullshit" or you could call it "hard-working x or whatever you want to call it. I'm not making a value judgement here, just wondering if that's a trend others have seen.

    * Yes of course I know women who put in crazy hours, like my mom did. After my dad died - he had also put in crazy hours. I'm asking if anyone has noticed an *overall* trend of women vs men *on* average.

    • by Nonesuch ( 90847 )

      Last I saw, Intel still used the "Focal" system of performance evaluation(Ranking and Rating). They distribute ratings among staff by percentage, with 10% getting the highest rating, and 10% getting the lowest.

      Used to be, being in the bottom 10% meant you were at risk of layoff, though in recent years being above the "bottom 10% forced ranking" didn't mean you weren't laid off anyway.

    • by GregMmm ( 5115215 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:44PM (#60835958)

      I was an employee for 11 years for Intel, and no the generalization you crafted about female employees working more like 40 hours and guys working more like 60-80 hours is totally not true. At least at Intel, if you're asking.

      Intel was a really good place to work. I enjoyed my time there. It is the same at any job. There work will never run out, so how much are you willing to give. This is how some saw it, like me. I put in 40 hours most weeks, and as is the case every month or so you would need to put in a few longer days to make sure a project stayed on target. Nothing I would consider being oppressive. Just part of working for a large tech company and we were all paid well for it.

      Next in line: This diversity thing I believe is what is killing Intel right now. They have been so focused on it for a number of years now they don't hire the best. It takes a long time for a large company to lose so much ground, but look at it today. They are now behind and I don't think they will ever recover.

      People, why is diversity important? It's not diversity of skin color/sex/etc. It's diversity of though. How did you get diversity of thought? Usually when you hired a black person from South Africa. When you hired a young Indian woman from India. When you hired a white guy from a affluent neighborhood. Bring them together and they can share their backgrounds. Each learn from each other.

      What is not diversity. Hiring the same black person, Indian woman, and white guy who had the same upbringing in the neighborhood, etc. It's not the skin that makes us so different. It's how we think and the perspectives we have that's important.

      If we hire by skin color, or sex or whatever, are we not just as racist, sexist, etc as ever before? How can we use these metrics for hiring and not look ourselves in the mirror and say: I just hired someone because they are "you fill in the blank"

      • by iamacat ( 583406 )

        Discrimination is a social ill, but why would diversity - of thought or otherwise - be automatically good for ANY business and line of work? When you have to be very creative and challenge status quo - sure. But in other cases employees need to execute without trying to each be a boss and avoid conflict in stressful situations. Why won't homogeneity be better in some of these cases?

        • > When you have to be very creative and challenge status quo - sure. But in other cases employees need to execute without trying to each be a boss and avoid conflict in stressful situations. Why won't homogeneity be better in some of these cases?

          I've been told by people from multiple other countries that American culture is very much more "think outside the box" and "do it your own way", whereas most other countries emphasize more following procedure, doing your little part for the overall organization,

      • > Intel was a really good place to work. I enjoyed my time there. It is the same at any job. There work will never run out, so how much are you willing to give. This is how some saw it, like me. I put in 40 hours most weeks, and as is the case every month or so you would need to put in a few longer days to make sure a project stayed on target.

        Thanks for the info!

        > female employees working more like 40 hours and guys working more like 60-80 hours is totally not true. At least at Intel, if you're asking

      • by Octorian ( 14086 )

        People, why is diversity important? It's not diversity of skin color/sex/etc. It's diversity of though. How did you get diversity of thought? Usually when you hired a black person from South Africa. When you hired a young Indian woman from India. When you hired a white guy from a affluent neighborhood. Bring them together and they can share their backgrounds. Each learn from each other.

        One big problem I have with all these "diversity statistics" reports is that they lump everyone by broad racial categories, and completely ignore ethic factors.
        The category labeled "white people" in tech is frequently composed of a very diverse pool of immigrants from all over Europe, the Middle East, and other parts of the world.
        Likewise, the category labeled "Asian people" in tech is also composed of a very diverse pool from East and South Asia.

        Yet, the way these stats are compiled, the total of both migh

    • For a lot of years, Intel had a system where they would have another team working on the same project as you, except they wouldn't tell you about it. Then whichever team completed the project successfully was chosen and the work of the other team was discarded. That seemed to work well for developing manufacturing processes, not so well for chip architecture, and it couldn't have been good for morale.

      Intel has also been one of the pioneers of outsourcing to cheaper countries (emphasis on cheap), sometimes

      • For a lot of years, Intel had a system where they would have another team working on the same project as you, except they wouldn't tell you about it. Then whichever team completed the project successfully was chosen and the work of the other team was discarded. That seemed to work well for developing manufacturing processes, not so well for chip architecture, and it couldn't have been good for morale...

        A "Two Men Enter, One Man Leaves" Thunderdome mentality towards personnel measurement and retention? Other than on an actual battlefield, we don't even find that stupid shit going on in our Military. Yeah, I can't imagine that being anything less than fucked for morale. Talk about cutthroat competition.

        Intel has also been one of the pioneers of outsourcing to cheaper countries (emphasis on cheap), sometimes with good results, sometimes not.

        For a company hell-bent on spending twice as much on resources assigning multiple teams to the same project in order to flush out the "unacceptables", they sure as hell don't seem cheap.

    • I don't think that's a fair analysis.

      I worked in pharmacy for 30 years. Our hours are insane (70 hour weeks for some shifts) and the high volume work loads are incredibly stressful (imagine a single mistake being enough to kill someone). The nearly two third ratio of women to men in the field seem quite capable of working long and hard hours. I'd even say that some of them were better suited to it then I was.

      \_()_/

  • If Intel wants to be more diverse, it'll have to hire in Africa or South America.

    Let's face it, all the smart people in the US are already working hard for someone else.

    No need for them to hire in Asia, they already have enough of those.

  • A simple, numbers-driven take on diversity is useless tokenism - performative diversity for public appearance. A real push for diversity would look at barriers to entry for diverse employees in corporate structures and culture. Having a diverse team can add value through broader viewpoints, life experience and outside the usual box thinking, but touting simple percentages and calling it a win are worse than doing nothing.
    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      Who do you think you are, James Damore?

      The essay that got him into so much trouble was basically an elaboration on your thesis: He argued that there are two ways to improve diversity, and Google's usual ratio-driven approach is the ultimately futile way to do that. Rather than trying to force the output ratios by forcing a certain input ratio, it is better to understand what incentives and environmental factors skew the input ratio so badly in the first place, and to address those structural issues rather

  • by LionKimbro ( 200000 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:32PM (#60835916) Homepage

    Intel Technical Staffing
    ---

    at Intel*, in the USA**

    White: [43.9%, 76.3%] -- UNDER -42%
    Asian: [39.7%, 5.9%] -- VASTLY OVER (672%)
    Latino/a: [10.3%, 18.5%] -- UNDER -44%
    Black: [4.9%, 13.4%] -- VASTLY UNDER -63%
    Native American: [0.8%, 1.3%] -- UNDER -38%
    Pacific Islander: [0.3%, 0.2%] -- OVER (150%)

    Intel -- https://www.intel.com/content/... [intel.com]
    USA census 2019 -- https://www.census.gov/quickfa... [census.gov]

    • by BBF_BBF ( 812493 )
      Intel can only hire who has the right qualifications. So using American demographics is completely unfair to Intel. The demographics that should be used are for the Electrical and Software Engineering, graduates vs. Intel Engineering staff. (Including marketing and other departments that tend to be more diverse also is unfair.)

      I'm not saying that there isn't disparity. I'm just saying it's not exactly Intel just being bigoted with its hiring practices. They can only hire from the available pool of qu
  • by marcle ( 1575627 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @09:34PM (#60835920)

    If the statistics aren't in your favor, form an industry consortium to agree on different statistics.

  • How does this compare with the diversity of Engineering graduates?
    If the bias is low, then the diversity composition should be close.
    To force a different diversity composition than with graduating candidates, discrimination is required.

    • because universities also have quotas and affirmative action its still biased, so people tend to compare to population average.. but of course these comparisons are based on skin color and sex, not diversity of thought or anything like that, which is hard to measure.

  • by iamacat ( 583406 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @10:00PM (#60835996)

    To do something they are not interested in? If there are objective ways in which they are treated worse than men with same talents, personality, family commitments, then by all way remedy these issues. In the school, nobody envied dateless geeks hunched over programmable calculators. Sure their jobs ended up paying nicely, but who is to say others would have enjoyed the tradeoffs. Let people live whoever they want rather than feeling they have to prove something for their tribe.

  • I am sure there are real business advantages to diversity. However what can Intel, or rather any other company can do about this?

    So you are looking for chip designers, or industrial engineers. If the "output" of the schools do not "fit"; then the "input" to the companies will not either. Of course they can try do do outreach programs, and tap into lost talent. However it will only go so far.

    Shall they turn down otherwise capable candidates to make others look good?

    What else can a single company do?

    • It's a horrible goal. What if people don't want to play your game? What if certain demographics just aren't interested in pursuing the education paths that will make them qualified to work for your company? What are you supposed to do, tell them they're WRONG for doing what they want in life?

      I know! You can lie to them and tell them they're secretly OPPRESSED by racistosexist mind control at an early age, called social conditioning, which makes them that way, and that way is BAD.

      Go ahead. Tell blacks t

  • Companies also struggle with making quality products and serving their paying customers well, but that's somehow taken for granted and nobody cares about it anymore.

  • I mean, who cares what they want to do with their own careers? Their responsibility is to the tech field, so let them start stepping up. If youâ(TM)re a woman and not working in technology, youâ(TM)re part of the problem. Get a job on a help desk now!

  • by rolytnz ( 1769750 ) on Tuesday December 15, 2020 @11:36PM (#60836174)
    Diversity and Equity is needed everywhere, all the time. So here's my diversity-for-the-sake-of-diversity recommendations:
    1. - More women bricklayers. 98% of bricklayers are men, and frankly, that is discriminatory and sexist
    2. - 93% of the worlds' dangerous jobs are undertaken by men, again, we need more women dying at work if we really want equity in the workplace
    3. - The NBA needs more white men, midgets, Amazonian Pygmies, and dual-transfemoral amputees. Disband the WNBA, in the name of equity and diversity there has to be 50/50 mixed teams
    4. - Every TV show ever needs to be remade with an accurate representation of modern ethnicities / gender identities / able-ness levels (can't say disabled). For example, there was not nearly enough Chinese people in Lawrence of Arabia. After all, China represents 17.9% of the world population in 2020, 1 in 6
    5. - The length of male pornstar members is under represented - the greater proportion of men are under 7", yet I don't see many of them in porn.

    Or, and this is going to sound crazy: how about people are employed and paid based on their experience and merits, or the time / risk they are prepared to commit to for that role, Where certain physical attributes are desirable for a role that people are employed because they meet or exceed that criteria. Call me nuts, perhaps the people in movies and TV shows represent the time/era/setting/location of the STORY.

    Imagine a utopia like that - instead of the hellhole culture of victimhood, entitlement, and general lack of responsibility that seems to have manifested in recent times.

    But then what would I know, I am the devil incarnate, a white middle-class cis male patriarchal oppressor of everyone.

    Probably the most victimized group these days.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      a white middle-class cis male patriarchal oppressor of everyone.

      probably the most victimized group these days.

      I'm not sure about oppressed but we certainly seem to have more whiny and incredibly delicate snowflakes than any other demographic, brother.

  • If a company hires based on current employee recommendations of course this happens, White people tend to know more white people. I think as men itâ(TM)s easy to say females do not enter this field, is this because they have no interest in it, or donâ(TM)t want to have to deal with the advances of every single co-worker or classmate.
    • If a company hires based on current employee recommendations of course this happens, White people tend to know more white people. I think as men itâ(TM)s easy to say females do not enter this field, is this because they have no interest in it, or donâ(TM)t want to have to deal with the advances of every single co-worker or classmate.

      Uh, the entire field is suddenly filled with nothing but CIS-male sexual predator assholes? Let's try and not make the assumptions worse than the problem. I highly doubt the reason that over 90% of nurses are women, is because men don't want to deal with the "advances of every single co-worker or classmate"...

  • Diversity Goals.

    Getting as many different people as possible, to all do the same thing.

    Stupid.

  • The only important question: Are women and minorities underrepresented at Intel compared to the percentage of women and minorities in tech careers, or graduating with applicable degrees over the past ten years?

  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @05:58AM (#60836716)

    It literally is the choosing of somebody because of the color of their skin or sexy parts etc. Instead of their skills.

    It's amazing how some people managed to package vile hate and discrimination in a wrapper of "if you don't do it, you are not being nice.... and we will HATE and discriminate against you too, because we are the nicest.".

    And it's fascinating, how lowlife humans will *always*, when they see something they deem evil, completely copy it, merely flip the polarity, and often even escalate, ... and NEVER ever get that they do it in a way that makes them just as evil.

    As long as we haven't fixed that basic trait in humanity... The concept that revenge would be acceptable... We're still truly a primitier species.
    Some people already knew and taught this, thousands of years ago, mind you. As the origins of our religious texts prove. (I mean the Jesus stories.)

  • I don't care what color or ethnicity you are. If you are highly skilled, educated/experienced, and qualified for the job/task, you should be the person in that position.

    Enough with the virtue-signaling bullshit.

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