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Code First Girls is a social enterprise that provides free coding courses to women and non-binary people across the UK, Ireland, the USA, Switzerland and the Netherlands. The organization helps companies recruit more women into the tech sector by connecting them with newly trained female developers. Their community of coders, instructors, and ...
Amali Chivanthi de Alwis (born April 1980) MBE FRSA was the CEO of Code First: Girls. Replaced by Anna Brailsford. She is currently [when?] UK Managing Director of Microsoft for Startups. [citation needed] She is a board member of Ada, the National College for Digital Skills, and the Institute of Coding.
The non-profit is the largest provider of free coding courses for women in the UK, delivering over £20 million worth of free technology education and teaching three times as many women to code as the entire UK university undergraduate system. [21] Code First Girls has now taught over 25,000 women to code. [21]
Most of the companies are in the Financials sector. [42] The S&P Europe 350 had the most companies with gender equitable boards, totaling 69, or 19.7% of the index. Some of the more recognizable companies in that group are Vodafone, Hermès, Diageo, H&M, Auto Trader, BNP Paribas, Pernod Ricard, Shell, SAP, and Heineken. France had the highest ...
Girls Do Porn was set up in 2006 by Mr Pratt, from New Zealand, which specialised in producing pornography of only younger women between 18 and 22. Ms Althaus, from Colorado, wanted to have a ...
The purpose of this order is to achieve gender equality and promote equal rights in the United States and worldwide. This order is a strategic objective designed to reduce poverty and foster economic growth in the US with the purpose of encouraging gender equality in employment.
If you’ve got a little change left over from gift-shopping today, use it for lunch. On Dec. 16, McDonald’s announced on its website that it’s selling its Double Cheeseburger for only 50 ...
Listing price on eBay: $2,500 There were countless Japanese-made, cartoon-like ceramic figurines made during the 1950s, and some of the most valuable (and collectible) are vintage salt and pepper ...