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Megan Smith [1964-0] American
Rank: 103
Public Servant


Megan J. Smith is the Chief Technology Officer of the United States. She was previously a vice president of Google[x] at Google, was vice president of business development at Google for nine years, and was general manager of Google.org and the former CEO of Planet Out. 

Science, Technology, Amazing, Experience, History, Power



QuoteTagsRank
The mandate for the CTO's office is to unleash the power of technology, data, and innovation on behalf of the nation. The CTO's office is really trying to bring best practices, possibilities, pilots, and policy advising. Power, Technology
101
Innovation comes out of great human ingenuity and very personal passions.
102
The things you're passionate about and interested in, get experience with them by going deep on projects. I would encourage science projects, plays. Pursue science, math, writing, history - the 21st century demands a lot of cross-disciplinary thinking. Experience, History, Science
103
We need to have making, including computer science, shop, etc. as part of the core curriculum from the beginning, not just an optional afterschool thing. Things like First Robotics and all of those great programs need to become mainstream. Science
104
The American government will be whatever we all make of it.
105
I love to use technology to help people have better lives and to reduce our impact on the planet. Technology
106
Second graders learn to read: that's a perfect time to make them code.
107
People can get into very bad habits of arguing ideas and shutting them down.
108
We are the only country with an operating rover on Mars. We are an amazing country on tech. Amazing
109
What was so special about the Mac, we all know, was the graphical computer interface.
110
Thinking through how to make sure we're bringing incredible toys and experiences and that to our girls and our boys at some point is really important for this country for the world in general.
111
I think it's so important in preschool and in kindergarten and elementary school that we're not biasing ourselves.
112
We know that diversity can sometimes be more uncomfortable because things are less familiar - but it gets the best results.
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Malala Yousafzai is all of our daughter, like Iqbal Masih who was all of our son.
114
Across our great nation, we've begun to see an acceleration of the power of data to deliver value.
115
I actually think that working in the federal government, or state or local, is one of the most significant things that a technical person can do.
116
The more people we can attract to science and technology - men, women, everybody - the more economic opportunity we have as a nation.
117
I went to an inner-city school in Buffalo. We had no money. But our teachers believed in hands-on active learning - there was a mandatory science fair, which was critical.
118
I think open source is an evolutionary idea for humanity, this idea of transparency. It played out for us in the technology world, but it also played out with the idea of a truth and reconciliation commission and Wikipedia.
119
It's very difficult to solve a lot of problems from the top down.
120
There's this fabulous innovation ship called Unreasonable at Sea, where I'm a mentor. One of the companies there was called Protei, and they're an open hardware ocean exploration and monitoring idea.
121
Science class is traditionally taught as science history class - you learn all these facts that someone else discovered, which you need to know, but that's not really an inspiring way to learn science.
122
I'm on the MIT board, and a lot of our buildings now have daycare centers; it's becoming a standard.
123
I've been working on the lost history of technical women.
124
Code is just a list of instructions. There are countries that are teaching it as part of the core curriculum. Having some experience in those early years is very important.
125
There are several places in Vietnam where they're teaching computer science from second grade in class, so they don't have a gender divide because everybody is expected to program.
126
We have two boys, and one of our kids is much more interested in history and stories, so if you want him to do some calculations about lenses, you would start talking to him about Galileo... Then he would be into the lenses, but if you just start talking to him about lenses, he might not stay with you.
201
Each kid is unique in what captures their attention and their passion.
202
Americans really expect to interact with our government digitally.
203
If we're the country that makes Amazon and Facebook and Twitter, why can't the federal government have websites and digital services that are awesome?
204
It's much easier to fail when you're in the pilot, early stage, when it's less expensive and you're exploring than when you're way out the door and you've spent all this money. Industry is smart: structured to have skunkworks and pilot phases.
205
It's an incredibly important thing to make sure we preserve net neutrality.
206
To me, there's so much talent in the world that's locked out for the wrong reasons, whether it's innovators at the highest end where we need to change the regulation systems, or whether it's the talented people who work here who the bureaucracy's holding back, or the amazing American people.
207
Net neutrality is such an important principle for the Web and for the Internet. It's how the Internet's operated for all this time.
208
The most important thing is, we really want to make sure the American people are able to get to any Web site they'd like to get to.
209
I was lucky that science fair was mandatory at my high school in inner-city Buffalo.
210
In the early IBM team, that was a racially diverse team, a gender-diverse team.
211
We culturally decided, as the personal computer came in, that it was for the boys.
212
You've got Americans who are making Amazon and Facebook and Twitter. That level of American needs to run future government.
213
There are 2 to 3 million women programmers in the world. We need to see them more.
214
Talent is everywhere. Not all talent has access.
215
For those of you who are underrepresented in technology, know that you've always been here. Look in photos and see yourself reflecting back.
216
Take everything you know. Take your whole selves. Be inclusive. Be open. Make history in the infinite ways that your heart takes you.
217
I have a good eye for great projects, talent, and entrepreneurs.
218
I like to work at the beginning of projects. Once they get stable, I'll hand them off.
219
We very much use a prototyping model, play with ideas, and then get stuff started that way, which is how the greatest projects get started.
220
It's so interesting that when somebody's pregnant, we are obsessed with knowing the gender of the child so we can figure out what we need to buy that child, what the present would be. Like we're pre-programming the kid before they were born.
221
Flipping our classrooms into active learning spaces really is important and having these convenient spaces where people feel comfortable.
222
I have been able to attend many technology conferences around the world over the years, including some of the largest, like Google I/O, Microsoft's Developer Conference, Apple's WorldWide Developers Conference, Oracle World, Le Web, and more.
223
Founded in 1994 by the Anita Borg Institute and growing every year, the Grace Hopper Celebration is bringing needed network connections, skill building, and visibility for women computer scientists who work at all levels of our industry.
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There are hundreds of historic and current examples of women and minorities doing groundbreaking work in technology, but so many of these stories are not well known, and in some cases, the stories have been all but lost.
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