Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

Do you work(ed) in IT?

Started by Emily R, September 04, 2015, 05:25:00 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Emily R

I don't know if it is a coincidence or not but it seems that people that work in IT (Information Technology) or related areas have a tendency to be transgender or crossdress more often than other non IT individuals, or is it just that we feel more comfortable expressing our ideas on a computer?

I myself have worked all my life in the IT (or as we oldies us to call it DP, for data processing). First as programmer, then analyst and currently as an IT consultant.

What do you think and maybe we can have a show of hands?

Emily


  •  

LizK

I raise my punch card in the air...Late into it, quit my job, went studying, moved into IT and stayed for about 10 years most of which was running my own business...working from home and onsite small business...
Transition Begun 25 September 2015
HRT since 17 May 2016,
Fulltime from 8 March 2017,
GCS 4 December 2018
Voice Surgery 01 February 2019
  •  

KathyLauren

Guilty as charged.  I spent most of my career in IT.
2015-07-04 Awakening; 2015-11-15 Out to self; 2016-06-22 Out to wife; 2016-10-27 First time presenting in public; 2017-01-20 Started HRT!!; 2017-04-20 Out publicly; 2017-07-10 Legal name change; 2019-02-15 Approval for GRS; 2019-08-02 Official gender change; 2020-03-11 GRS; 2020-09-17 New birth certificate
  •  

Lynne

I always loved technology and as soon as I saw a computer when I was a child I knew that I want one. I went to the best secondary school in our country which had an IT class and I always worked on projects related to computers and IT. But I'm quite sure that if I hadn't been outcast from a very early age I would have spent faaar less time around computers.

I think transgender people tend to choose IT or related fields and not the other way around.
IT can appeal to trans* people because it can be an endless source of distraction from reality, you don't need other people to do it and you have freedom to do whatever you want.
  •  

Dena

Punch card, paper tape, magnetic tape here. All my after school work has been in fortran or assembler, mostly assembler. I am stubborn and I enjoy it when I can beat the computer at it's own game.

I was pretty much of an introvert and a job where I didn't have to deal with people appeared to be a big advantage. That kind of all fell apart with my current job because we have over 100,000 lines of assembler code written by several programmers and before I got to it, it was really buggy. I need to learn what each programer had in mind before I could clean up the mess. Sometimes communication was pretty poor because they didn't know what they were up to so I needed to hit the books before I fixed stuff.
Rebirth Date 1982 - PMs are welcome - Use [email]dena@susans.org[/email] or Discord if your unable to PM - Skype is available - My Transition
If you are helped by this site, consider leaving a tip in the jar at the bottom of the page or become a subscriber
  •  

alegutier

I have also noticed this. I have about 10 years of experience in IT. As a network admin, tech, desktop support, programmer. Just all over the place really.

I recently quit my day job and changed careers, but I have noticed this too. :)
Alexandria Gutierrez
BODYCOMBAT / BODYFLOW / Turbo-Kick / INSANITY Instructor
Transgender Advocate
http://coachalexandria.com
  •  

Jenelle

Another IT peep here. I never planned to do this, I wanted to be an architect or race car driver. No seriously. Programming had always just come naturally to me from the first Z81 computer my uncle gave me.

Somehow after the Air Force I managed to turn my hobby into a career.
  •  

kathb31

Yes, I have worked in IT for 30 years .. kind of burned out now
and until recently have lived mostly as male. I've never thought of the
connection here for tg but it is interesting


Kath
  •  

Lilith

I am in the IT field as well! Guess when I was young and online, I always told people I was a girl, not for any hookup reasons, just felt like that's who I was. Makes sense to me to love what made me free.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk

  •  

Sydney_NYC

Yep, IT field since 1995, and did some IT/Programming work for the University I was attending at.
Sydney





Born - 1970
Came Out To Self/Wife - Sept-21-2013
Started therapy - Oct-15-2013
Laser and Electrolysis - Oct-24-2013
HRT - Dec-12-2013
Full time - Mar-15-2014
Name change  - June-23-2014
GCS - Nov-2-2017 (Dr Rachel Bluebond-Langner)


  •  

ozpkm

Me too, pushing 30 years as an IT pro.
  •  

Rejennyrated

Well in my first job I was a materials scientist that became a software engineer, so not quite IT, but computers played a big part, and I am certainly familiar with punch tape and front panel bootstrapping etc. I had an interesting job too, although not one that I tend to put on the CV for reasons you will soon understand. My apolgies for a slight diversion which I hope may be amusing.

I was working at an American company who were contracted to NASA to develop a testing protocol for certain elastomeric samples. I developed the testing programme and the machine plus data were delivered to NASA (or their supplier) and we all thought no more of it until the day that Challenger blew up... :o

Yup! I was the young engineer who developed the test that had been used to test THOSE O rings - and for many years until the enquiry reported and confirmed that the testing HAD revealed the flaw in the material before the launch I lived under the fear that perhaps my formulae had been wrong in which case the death of seven astronauts would have been directly down to my programming skills - or lack of them.

Some time later the fear of being indirectly responsible for a death if my software malfunctioned lead me away from that field and a I retrained as a BBC Videotape editor. Somewhat Ironic that I am now back in "line of fire" as a trainee medic.
  •  

Dena

Quote from: Rejennyrated on September 05, 2015, 04:17:51 AM
I was working at an American company who were contracted to NASA to develop a testing protocol for certain elastomeric samples. I developed the testing programme and the machine plus data were delivered to NASA (or their supplier) and we all thought no more of it until the day that Challenger blew up... :o

Yup! I was the young engineer who developed the test that had been used to test THOSE O rings - and for many years until the enquiry reported and confirmed that the testing HAD revealed the flaw in the material before the launch I lived under the fear that perhaps my formulae had been wrong in which case the death of seven astronauts would have been directly down to my programming skills - or lack of them.
Your program preformed without a flaw. The limits of the material where well understood before the launch but NASA was more worried about getting the bird off the ground than the possibility of an O ring failure. In addition, there had been past failures but they weren't as destructive so NASA figured the risk was minimal. The decision to launch was political and not science based.

I had a boss who as a condition of employment calculated the the cost of moving families between military bases for the companies who did the moving. Every so often, they would send him a fresh batch of numbers which he would plug into his program and then the moving people would spend a day in the office reviewing the numbers. The last time he did this, the company sent in a flawed batch of number causing all the work to be way under priced and nobody caught the error so the moving company took a real hit. Even though it wasn't my bosses fault, it scared him so much that he decided to stop doing the work on the side.
Rebirth Date 1982 - PMs are welcome - Use [email]dena@susans.org[/email] or Discord if your unable to PM - Skype is available - My Transition
If you are helped by this site, consider leaving a tip in the jar at the bottom of the page or become a subscriber
  •  

Starfire

Yep, been in the IT field professionally for about 20 years now.
  •  

KristinaM

I've always been good with computers and officially went into the IT field about 7 years ago.  I've tinkered around on them for about 18 years though.

I keep a box of gender changers on my desk for comedic effect, lol.
  •  

Dena

Quote from: KristinaM on September 05, 2015, 11:07:09 PM
I keep a box of gender changers on my desk for comedic effect, lol.
I guess I was more into reassignment surgery because I had a connector punch tool and would grab a soldering iron whenever that problem came up.  :o
Rebirth Date 1982 - PMs are welcome - Use [email]dena@susans.org[/email] or Discord if your unable to PM - Skype is available - My Transition
If you are helped by this site, consider leaving a tip in the jar at the bottom of the page or become a subscriber
  •  

Katiepie

I have 8 years of service as IT in the United States Army, mainly networking, and a little bit on the administrative side.
Networking dealing in ipv4, Cisco systems, and now dealing with Brocade.
Though on a path to completely 180 my career into forestry and wildlife conservation.

Kate <3
My life motto: Wake Up and BE Awesome!

"Every minute of your life that you allow someone to dictate your emotions, is a minute of your life you are allowing them to control you." - a dear friend of mine.

Stay true to yourself no matter the consequence, for this is your life, your decision, your trust in which will shape your future. Believe in yourself, if you don't then no one will.
  •  

iKate

Yes I've been in IT for as long as I remember, almost 20 years in it now starting with part time jobs at computer stores.

Oldest computer I've worked on was an IBM System/36.

Now I do Unix systems administration but also some engineering on the broadcast side.
  •  

katrinaw

All my life and still in IT... 41 years

Just started at another Major after a very long break... and will transition in role after the required new hire periods. Assuming there is stability this time...

So I am guilty of IT too  ::)

OK started of as a CE (Customer Engineer)
Then a regional support (guru)
Then managed a DC and teams
Then a CTO and services manager
Then lots... eventually moving into Leading Architectural Solutioning/governance/commercial in outsourcing for last 6 ~ 8 years - Geez dinosaur teeth

Oh Kate I used to be a wiz on Unix too, after the VMS trips  ;)


Katy xx

Long term MTF in transition... HRT since ~ 2003...
Journey recommenced Sept 2015  :eusa_clap:... planning FT 2016  :eusa_pray:

Randomly changing 'Katy PIC's'

Live life, embrace life and love life xxx
  •  

JoanneB

In my support group there are 2 EE's, 3 programmers/IT folks, a tech trainer (All she can say nod nod wink wink), another is an automated controls guru, and a wannabe IT person in training. Add to that a few with technical, albeit mechanical, skillsets.

Oddly, no real artsy types or people who sing show tunes. Go figure
.          (Pile Driver)  
                    |
                    |
                    ^
(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
  •