Check,
https://foss.in/2006/cfp/speakers/talkdetailspub.php?talkid=185

More on,
http://www.google.com.bd/search?q=Suparna+Bhattacharya


On 11/29/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Where is the girl!!!
>
>
>
> Jamil Ahmed wrote:
> > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> > From: Frederick Noronha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Date: Nov 28, 2006 3:34 PM
> > Subject: [iosn-general] Free and Open Source Software gets new 'poster girl'
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
> > http://www.rxpgnews.com/india/Free-and-Open-Source-Software-gets-new-poster-girl_6312.shtml
> > Free and Open Source Software gets new 'poster girl'
> > Nov 28, 2006 - 2:33:26 PM
> >
> > IBM has facilities in all the major cities of India -- Bangalore,
> > Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Pune, Gurgaon and Hyderabad. IBM has a Linux
> > Solutions Centre and a Linux Competency Centre, both in Bangalore.
> > Bhattacharya is attached to the India Software Lab.
> >
> > * * * *
> >
> > By Frederick Noronha, RxPG News Service, Bangalore, Nov 28 - India's
> > Free and Open Source Software - movement just has got a new
> > poster-boy, or rather girl -- Suparna Bhattacharya, the star of the
> > just-concluded FOSS.in event held here and presenter of the inaugural
> > keynote, is seen as one of India's most respected Linux kernel
> > developers.
> >
> > For a growing network of techies taking to Free and Open Source
> > Software in India, the find of a woman who has achieved so much so
> > quietly came as a big surprise. And long-felt gender issues become a
> > little less painful, thanks to 35-year-old Bhattacharya's 'we can do
> > it' proof.
> >
> > Commented FOSS.in project lead and tech guru Atul Chitnis: '- is an
> > Indian, working in India, contributing to the FOSS world... Not only
> > is she everything that FOSS.in wants to achieve -, but she proves that
> > it can be done.'
> >
> > The Linux kernel is at the heart of the GNU/Linux operating. Linux is
> > now one of the most widely ported operating system kernels, running on
> > a diverse range of systems from the hand-held iPAQ computers to the
> > massive mainframe servers and supercomputers.
> >
> > Kernel programming is considered complex.
> >
> > Amidst intense applause, the soft-spoken and lightly built
> > Bhattacharya took the stage. One of her first slides read: 'In case
> > you are wondering why I am the keynote speaker, you are not alone.'
> >
> > She declined interviews with 'I'm more comfortable discussing
> > technical issues', and only relented after awhile.
> >
> > Once on stage, obviously overawed by the adulation, in a full Indian
> > Institute of Sciences hall, she explained -- sometimes speaking too
> > fast for foreigners in the audience to keep track -- concepts like
> > 'beauty' and elegance in coding, 'minimalism' - in software, and
> > ephemerialisation -.
> >
> > Bhattacharya herself plays down her own achievements. She has been to
> > global hacker conferences -- usually held in Ottawa, Canada -- for
> > five years.
> >
> > 'I never felt the difference -. People tell me I've been very lucky,'
> > she said in a hall so dominated by young male geeks that you'd be
> > lucky to see 20 women in 750 seats. She said the corporation she works
> > with, IBM, has a couple of more women working on the kernel.
> >
> > 'Probably people didn't know my gender from my - name. In any case,
> > the Linux world is very diverse. The colour of your hair doesn't
> > matter. It's just the quality of your code,' Bhattacharya told IANS.
> >
> > Bhattacharya, who grew up 'mostly in Delhi' and then went to Indian
> > Institute of Technology --Kharagpur, feels Indian contributions to the
> > world of alternate computing -- Free and Open Source Software -- might
> > be under-recognised because coders from this part of the globe tend to
> > be not 'very vocal or shy'.
> >
> > 'It's easier for me to talk technical stuff...Some amount of humility
> > is a good thing, I sometimes feel.'
> >
> > But others see it differently, and take pride in her achievement.
> >
> > Ubuntu-India developer Baishampayan Ghosh said of Bhattacharya: 'She
> > is one of the very, very few - kernel hackers in the world, and a very
> > unassuming person.'
> >
> > IBM India, by some counts, is seen as the fourth largest employer in
> > the Indian IT industry -- after TCS, Infosys and Wipro. India also has
> > the second largest workforce for IBM now, second to IBM US. It is one
> > of the mega-corps that is investing heavily in Free and Open Source
> > Software.
> >
> > IBM has facilities in all the major cities of India -- Bangalore,
> > Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Pune, Gurgaon and Hyderabad. IBM has a Linux
> > Solutions Centre and a Linux Competency Centre, both in Bangalore.
> > Bhattacharya is attached to the India Software Lab.
> >
> > Some unofficial statistics say IBM India's 43,000 employees are
> > expected to grow to 100,000 by the end of this decade.
> > --
> > FN 9822122436 +91-832-240-9490 (phone calls after 1 pm please)
> > FLOSS, geeks, blogs:  [http://planet.foss.in/]
> > _______________________________________________
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> >

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