Celebrating Women in Technology - Lynn Thomas Bass
Posted on September 24, 2020 by Keith Lynn
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A Degree in Computing
I was exposed to computing in several settings including Explorers, a program of the Boy Scouts. I thought it was interesting to be able to “control” what was presented onscreen.
Finding Inspiration
I had an uncle who was a computer programmer. He was thrilled that someone else in the family was interested in Computing so he was a big influence.
How Has Computing Changed?
Ha! Can you say “no more green screens?” I saw Computing change almost overnight during my years as a student. When I was a freshman, we worked on “dumb terminals” and printed our programs on “deckwriters.” By the time I graduated we were programming on personal computers and printing our programs on high speed printers. And, of course, the rapid change in Computing has continued at an even faster pace.
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Favorite Class/Favorite Instructor
My favorite class was actually outside of computer science, but was required for the degree. It was a logic class in the Philosophy department. It was different from any class that I had taken to that point. It supplemented your coding classes to understand why you coded in a structured manner.
Favorite Student Memories
The beautiful campus and close knit community. South is a beautiful campus. I love that it is self-contained and not interspersed with non-campus buildings like other universities. Also, the smaller student body and the very small (at that time) number of Computing students made for a tight group of students, faculty and friends.
Encouraging Words
You can do it and you will always be glad that you did! I was not at the top of my graduating class and was anxious about finding a job using my degree, but fortunately, I did. Many other opportunities have since presented themselves. Computing did not come particularly easy to me. It was almost as if you had to learn a completely new way of thinking (top-down, logical, structured, hierarchical). I’ve had this conversation with another woman co-worker who also majored in Computing that a Computing degree serves you well regardless of your position—programmer, analyst, manager, etc. The discipline that Computing teaches equips you well for analyzing problems, developing solutions and implementing process improvements.