|
|
To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu
-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
|
Google wants Australian engineers, more girls By Munir Kotadia, ZDNet Australia May 30, 2007 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Google-wants-Australian-engineers-more-girls/0,130061733,339277973,00.htm
Google loves Australian tech talent but wants to attract more female engineers, according to Alan Noble, the company's local engineering director, who pointed out that Sydney-based developers created Google Maps. Speaking in a panel session at the Australian Information Industry Association (AIIA) Borderless World Conference in Sydney today, Noble said Google has one of the most distributed engineering departments of any company in the world -- because it doesn't expect all its employees to work out of California. "We came [to Sydney] because we recognise that not everyone who is a bright engineer wants to work in Mountain View, California (Google's HQ). The fact of the matter is that we need to go where the talent is and the talent is in Sydney, it is in Beijing, it is in Tokyo and it is in Trondheim, Norway -- as it turns out. "We love Australian software development and engineering talent. In fact, Google Maps, which is now the world's number one maps Web site was developed right here in Sydney Australia -- that is just one of the many innovations I hope to see coming out of Google Australia," Noble said. G'day Google "I believe we need to appeal to the expat Australian community. G'day Google was our first attempt to create some awareness that there are some exciting opportunities back in Australia," said Noble, who is Australian but lived in California for 16 years before coming back to work in Sydney for the search giant. Girls in IT "The new generation of Web based applications are highly collaborative. Social networking applications and social sharing applications -- these are precisely the type of highly connected applications where we need female engineers. "I find it ironic that as IT is evolving to this new model of Web based applications, we find ourselves with a shortage of female engineers," said Noble.
Copyright © 2009 CBS Interactive, a CBS Company. All Rights Reserved. |