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Tech Week: C-E-Bros, Diversity Numbers And The Beats Deal

Rapper Dr. Dre is an executive at Apple, now.
Chelsea Lauren
/
Getty Images for BET
Rapper Dr. Dre is an executive at Apple, now.

The evidence of a lack of gender parity in technology keeps stacking up; this week we saw the fraternity-day emails of Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel and the diversity and gender breakdowns that Google's been reluctant to share. Let's get right into your week in review:

ICYMI

Bros in The Valley: As companies like Google and Snapchat seek to lead the new information age, they are looking pretty backward when it comes to equality and diversity. the company is 70 percent male; African-American and Latino employees don't register above 5 percent. Meanwhile, detail his tactics for getting girls drunk and jokes about "peeing on" women and "shooting lasers at fat chicks." He apologized. "the days of Chief Executive Bro are numbered."

The Big Conversations

The Google Car: The search giant has and it looks like a cross between a Smart car and that you might have had as a kid. No steering wheel, and it goes about 25 mph. But as Venture Beat writes, could make this viable as smarter, greener transportation in the future.

Billion-Dollar Beats: Apple made it official, announcing to buy Dr. Dre and music industry veteran Jimmy Iovine's Beats Music. Dre and Iovine are joining Apple in unspecified executive roles. The news led to a lot of Monday morning quarterbacking about made a deal like this, but both sides seem to be pleased as punch, for now.

Curiosities

WSJ:

In the wake of last week's U.S. indictment of Chinese hackers, a well-reported piece detailing the reach of Chinese cyber-espionage.

Longform:

The journalist who broke the Snapchat CEO's emails talked with Longform.org's podcast about covering modern-day Silicon Valley. Biddle describes an industry of "overgrown, entitled manchildren pulling price tags out of the ether."

The Official Microsoft Blog:

Remember the universal translator imagined in Star Trek? Microsoft showed off the Skype Translator, doing near real-time audio translation from English to German and vice versa, and said it would be available as a Windows 8 beta app by year end.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Elise Hu is a host-at-large based at NPR West in Culver City, Calif. Previously, she explored the future with her video series, Future You with Elise Hu, and served as the founding bureau chief and International Correspondent for NPR's Seoul office. She was based in Seoul for nearly four years, responsible for the network's coverage of both Koreas and Japan, and filed from a dozen countries across Asia.

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