The Women in Technology International Hall of Fame was established in 1996 by Women in Technology International (WITI) to honor women who contribute to the fields of science and technology.[1]
Women in Technology International Hall of Fame inductees
Dr. Jaleh Daie (1948–), managing partner, Aurora Equity,[7] a Palo Alto-based investment company financing technology start ups. Treasurer of US Space Foundation (first woman appointed to its board of directors). Member of Band of Angels
Dr. Barbara Grant, venture capitalist, former vice president and general manager in the Data Storage Division at IBM[8]
Carol Bartz (1948– ), former president and CEO of Yahoo!, former chairman, president and CEO at Autodesk
The ENIAC Programmers: The original six women programmers of ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer), first general-purpose electronic digital computer[13][14][15]
Dr. Claudine Simson, former executive vice president, chief technology officer, LSI Corporation; current Director & Business Development Executive, Research and IP, Worldwide Growth Markets, IBM Corporation
Neerja Raman, global manufacturing and poverty. Senior Research Fellow, Stanford University; advisor, Committee for Cyber-Infrastructure, National Science Foundation; formerly HP Labs[62]
2006
Maria Azua, former IBM Vice President of Advanced Cloud Solutions, former IBM VP of Technology & Innovation; patent in Transcoder technology, Java implementation and enhancements, data manipulation[63][64]
Kim Jones, former president and managing director for Sun Microsystems UK & Ireland; former VP of Global Education, Government and Health Sciences, Sun Microsystems; chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Curriki[67]
Jian (Jane) Xu, Ph.D., CTO, IBM China Systems and Technology Labs; Distinguished Engineer of IBM Watson Research, focusing on the research of IT and Wireless Convergence[95][96]
Dr. Sharon Nunes, VP, IBM's Smarter Cities Strategy & Solutions, which focuses on improving quality of life at urban centers worldwide by partnering with city governments to improve transportation, waste management and energy use[104][105][106]
Dr. Carolyn Turbyfill, VP Engineering, Stacksafe[107][108]
Joanne Martin, Ph.D. (1947–). Served on management team that developed and delivered IBM's first supercomputer, with specific responsibility for the performance measurement and analysis of the system.[139][140] Distinguished Engineer and VP of Technology, IBM Corporation
^Selinger, P. G.; Astrahan, M. M.; Chamberlin, D. D.; Lorie, R. A.; Price, T. G. (1979), "Access Path Selection in a Relational Database Management System", Proceedings of the 1979 ACM SIGMOD International Conference on Management of Data, pp. 23–34, doi:10.1145/582095.582099, ISBN978-0897910019, S2CID8537523
^Kovsky, Eddie (November 27, 2006). "Q & A with Hewlett-Packard's Nor Rae Spohn". Long Island Business News.
^Hagadone, Zach (June 20, 2008). "Boise HP exec announces retirement as company gears up for reorganization". Idaho Business Review.
^"Dr. Been-Jon Woo: Silicon Technology Pioneer". A Culture Research Project for Women Studies 320: Gender and Technology, Steven Haskell: 2008, Oregon State University. July 5, 2008. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
^"Dr. Sophie Vandebroek". A Field Guide to Female Leaders, Influencers & Deal Makers. Archived from the original on June 22, 2013. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
^Martin, edited by Joanne L.; Lundstrom, Stephen F. (1989). Proceedings, supercomputing '88. science and applications. Washington, D.C.: IEEE Computer Society Press. ISBN978-0818689239. ((cite book)): |first= has generic name (help)
^Martin, Joanne L.; Mueller-Wichards, Dieter (January 1, 1987). "Supercomputer performance evaluation: Status and directions". The Journal of Supercomputing. 1 (1): 87–104. doi:10.1007/BF00138607. S2CID38241610.