I've never felt like race was a big issue in my local startup community. There are plenty of black, brown, olive, tan, yellow, and peach individuals sprinkled throughout in most events I attend here in Houston.
Sometimes it would be nice to connect with them just we share that kind of commonality, but I always felt that creating a "black startup" meeting group would be extremely cheesy and too inclusive.
I don't care what color they are as long as they come up with good ideas and do what they say they will do.
That being said...markets are markets and if you have some cultural or ethnic insight into an opportunity for a business or a way to help your specific community; you should count yourself lucky for being born whatever you are and try to capitalize on it.
Theres no reason the team you build has to be racially ?inclusive/exclusive?, and actually the aforementioned diversity actually helps strengthen teams in my opinion by providing those different cultural or ethnic perspectives.
...the aforementioned diversity actually helps strengthen teams in my opinion by providing those different cultural or ethnic perspectives.
I don't really agree with this. My company (currently 3 people) was ethnically homogeneous before I came onboard. Diversity of thought did not increase much when I was hired, even though I am ethnically different. (I studied computational science in college instead of computer science, talk about diversity). We may hire a 4'th person - a business guy who would bring a LOT of new ideas and skills to us. Ethnically he is the same as everyone else here.
Diversity of ethnicity != diversity of thought. It's a fallacy to equate the two.
LOL....good response...but I disagree with your disagreement.
We as humans generate ideas that often feel spontaneous, but are actually the result of a lifetime of experience mixed with innate problem solving ability and our present state. theres a ton of research on creativity i can send you
I know your life experiences are different than mine, without having a hint as to your race. Race comes into the picture because having a different race often means you have different cultural aspects thats formed you as the person you are today.
Sure a group of programmers are going to come up with different solutions to a problem vs a group of designers.
Diversity of ethnicity just ensures that prior to chosen profession, each individual grew up with a cultural background that does influence the ideas they come up with
Maybe so, but those cultural aspects are utterly irrelevant for most jobs.
Some info on my job: I program for an HFT company. Right now, I'm taking a break from building some graphing addons to my companies trading system (waiting for the program to finish running). Once that's done, I'll return to my primary task of increasing P&L by losing less money when certain market events happen. Any hint as to my ethnicity yet, or do you need UML diagrams, latencies, etc to determine that?
Here is a project I'm working on (command line bug tracker interface, i.e. access trac/github without leaving the command line). Can you point out my cultural influences? http://github.com/stucchio/Idli
You can easily detect the cultural differences between programmers and business guys. With a bit more effort, you can detect the differences between a computational physics guy (me) and CS guys (my coworkers). I doubt you could detect the ethnic differences. Can you really say ethnicity matters if you can't detect the result of it?
> Race comes into the picture because having a different race often means you have different cultural aspects thats formed you as the person you are today.
If true and job relevant (that the cultural aspects had some effect on how they approach problems), that means that different races will have different success likelyhoods in a given occupation.
Why? Because success in a given occupation does not depend on all things equally.
> each individual grew up with a cultural background that does influence the ideas they come up with
Yup, and since different ideas are more useful in different occupations....
Diversity of people and opinions are why cities are preferable to rural areas. It’s also why inclusive cultures like America, Switzerland, Canada, Australia, Hong Kong and Argentina are more innovative than monocultures like Mainland China, India, and certain European countries.
I'm perplexed by your inclusion of Argentina. I'm aware that most people from Argentina can trace their ancestry to various corners of Europe, but I wasn't aware that Argentina was more innovative than China or India.
I don't know what part of Houston you are in, but I know there are a lot of REALLY bright guys that get together over at the G's and Z's on Alameda in the Third Ward. I live down Sunset by Rice Village but I was in that coffee shop one night when they got together. I have to confess that I was shocked actually at how bright those guys were.
They felt pretty inclusive too... I mean hey, they let me sit in. So I don't think it is necessarily, a "black" group.
Only issue was that I only met one of them who was into software/web startups. Most were in energy modeling or global scale logistics. Think Houston Halliburton, not San Fran Twitter.
The one I met in web startups made children's iPad games. Math if I remember correctly. Pretty cool guy though, he spoke a lot of languages. I'm looking up a couple of contact emails for those guys and I will direct them to this thread...maybe you can drop in next time they get together.
Thats cool....I grew up in that neighborhood and never knew. I'll start checking it out and see if I can meet them. You seem cool as well, hit me up on twitter we can hang as well...
I forgot to mention something else that I thought was really cool: in the late 80s Hank wrote an organizer application called Daymaker for the Mac, which won a bunch of awards, and which he turned into a pretty successful business for a number of years. So he's been doing this for a long time.
The real question you should have researched more is why there is a high-rate of black people not showing their faces on twitter icons or "hiding" as you describe it. Do some interviews, I believe that will be a more interesting topic.
Does it even matter whether you are Black, White, Brown or Pink, Red, Yellow, Green or whatever as far as the person is smart, dedicated and hardworking.
That's true, but it's nice to know who's out there. If you only read TechCrunch, you'd think MCHammer and Chamillionaire are the only black folks to ever touch a computer. Nothing against them, but yeah.
Well yes and no. I just wanted to know if there were people that look like me doing the same things. Similar to a Developer who seeks out devs that code in the same language. No Offense. Sorry it irked you so much
Yes it matters, but not for success. When you're the minority in a field, it feels good when you discover there are others from the same background who have chosen the same path as you and have been successful.
I've never felt like race was a big issue in my local startup community. There are plenty of black, brown, olive, tan, yellow, and peach individuals sprinkled throughout in most events I attend here in Houston.
Sometimes it would be nice to connect with them just we share that kind of commonality, but I always felt that creating a "black startup" meeting group would be extremely cheesy and too inclusive.
I don't care what color they are as long as they come up with good ideas and do what they say they will do.
That being said...markets are markets and if you have some cultural or ethnic insight into an opportunity for a business or a way to help your specific community; you should count yourself lucky for being born whatever you are and try to capitalize on it.
Theres no reason the team you build has to be racially ?inclusive/exclusive?, and actually the aforementioned diversity actually helps strengthen teams in my opinion by providing those different cultural or ethnic perspectives.