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Danish women in Tech – come and celebrate Ada Lovelace Day 2018
9 October 2018 @ 4:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Free3Shape and the Department of Computer Science DIKU – University of Copenhagen, are joining forces to celebrate the Ada Lovelace Day 2018 in Denmark! You are kindly invited to spend an afternoon of talk, networking and refreshments – a day dedicated to women who have chosen technological and scientific paths sharing their stories.
The achievements of woman in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) are celebrated on the second Tuesday of October around the world. A day that honors Ada Lovelace, an English mathematician, who is acknowledged to be the first to realize the full potential of a “computing machine” and the first computer programmer. Lovelace was a trailblazer who recognized that the machine could have applications beyond pure calculation. She is credited with writing the first algorithm intended to be carried out by such a machine.
Ada Lovelace Day is an international celebration of the achievements of women in STEM. It was started in 2009 by Suw Charman-Anderson as a day of blogging about women in tech. It has rapidly developed into a broader celebration of women in STEM.
This year, 3Shape and DIKU join the community of countries hosting local ALD events!
Program:
16:00 Doors open
16:15 Welcome by Mette Båstrup-Larsen, M.Sc. Computer Science and People and Project Manager, Scanner Development, 3Shape
16:30 “The role of uncertainty when data points are estimated from data” by Aasa Feragen, Associate Professor, The Image Section, Department of Computer Science University of Copenhagen
16:45 “Why programmers are obsolete” by Dina Friis, Nordic Senior Agile Coach at NETS
17:00 Food, drinks and hands-on experience with 3Shape software and scanners
17:45 Cognitive control of a hearing aid by Carina Graversen, scientist at Eriksholm Research Centre/Oticon
18:00 “Staying part of the development process after becoming a manager” by Kristine Slot, Project Manager & Software Development, 3Shape
18:15 Q&A
18.30 Drinks, network, mingle and hands-on experience with 3Shape software and scanners
Speakers and talks
Aasa Feragen
BIO
Aasa Feragen is an Associate Professor at the Dept. of Computer Science, UCPH, following a PhD in math and a postdoc at the MPI for Intelligent Systems in Tübingen, Germany. Aasa’s group works at the intersection where real problems and computational constraints meet mathematical modelling.
ABSTRACT
Data objects are often themselves estimated from data: In structural brain connectivity, connections are segmented (extracted) from noisy medical images. A typical population study aims to quantify population differences between healthy and ill, but ignores the segmentation uncertainty, and thus underestimates uncertainty in the population analysis, which can be fatal. I will discuss a solution.
Kristine Slot
BIO
Kristine Slot has been working with software development in 3shape for almost 10 year – either with her fingers directly in the code or as a Project Manager for innovative teams, contributing to the software development process in a more indirect way.
ABSTRACT
Kristine will talk about being a software developer at heart – also after following a calling as a Project Manager. She will talk about how to still be part of the creative, innovative process, still finding some time to do some code and using the software development skills in Project Management.
Dina Friis
BIO
Dina Friis has a master’s in computer science from the University of Copenhagen. She has a background as Java Developer, Scrum Master and independent Agile Coach and is today working as Senior Nordic Agile Coach at Nets in a business unit with more than 30 teams across the Nordic countries, India and Romania. She has been part of the team behind Scrumpatterns.org from the start in 2010.
ABSTRACT
Most companies today are embracing Agile ways of working on different levels. But one area where most fail is the urge to hold on to the job role Developer. Agile is about increasing the value of the product and the organisation. This talk will be about aligning roles around value creation and how the Developer fits in to a modern Agile organisation.
Carina Graversen
BIO
Carina Graversen works as a scientist at Eriksholm Research Centre – part of Oticon. Carina holds a PhD in brain research, and now works with cognitive hearing science to develop future hearing aids to be steered by brain waves and other physiological measures.
ABSTRACT
My hearing aid is not working – it amplifies all sounds, and not only the speech I want to attend to! This common complaint by hearing impaired having their first hearing aid may soon be history. Come and hear the latest advances in obtaining a cognitive controlled hearing aid steered by brain waves and other physiological measures.