"Follow your bliss, try new things,
don't give up when life gets rough..."
Who I Am and What I Do
I am the Webmaster of Ames Research Center. I am responsible for the
oversight of over 100 webmasters and over 1000 websites. The most enjoyable
aspect of my job is interacting with our customers, and creating new
websites to communicate to the outside world what we do here at NASA.
In addition, I manage the web services group, which provides
web-releated services to our program and project managers. One of our
most highly visited sites is the Ames homepage at http://www.arc.nasa.gov.
Career Journey
I have an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering, and a masters
in computer science. While there is no math or science required for
my day to day activities, my background is helpful in terms of understanding
the technological issues.
In school, I enjoyed my courses in film, creative writing , and computer
science. I was never directed away from taking math and science classes
in favor of liberal arts classes like English, history, teaching, or
art. In fact, my background is a little too focused on the sciences
for my current tastes and interests, and I think for the direction that
the world and NASA should be moving in today. I believe we all need
a more balanced education with 50% liberal arts/ 50% hard sciences.
Surprisingly, most of Ames' upper management is male, and this sends
the wrong message, setting a corporate image and tone that may undervalue
diversity, creativity and intuition. I found my current position by
forming a mentoring relationship with a senior manager in the Directorate
Office. Unfortunately, there are few role models for women at this level.
Advice
From my experience, "words of wisdom" that I can give to a 1114
year-old regarding life areFollow your bliss, try new things,
don't give up when life gets rough, and stay away from drugs and alcohol.
Here is a quote from Newt Gingrich, of all people, from Wired magazine
(Aug. 95) that I would like to share about life today:
"We have to do nine things in parallel, which is complicated. We
have to renew American civilization at a core-values level. We have
to do everything we think we are doing to compete in a world market
so we're economically sufficient. We have to make the transition to
the information age. We have to replace welfare with a very different
set of values and structures. We have to decentralize power out of
Washington, and ideally out of government to some extent. Everything
we do at the federal level ought to be the best in the world, or we
shouldn't be doing it. We need to balance the budget for fiscal long-term
reasons that are very real in terms of baby boomers' retirement, in
terms of our kids' lives. We need to reestablish physical safety against
drugs, violent crime, and foreign attacks. And finally, we have to
lead the planet. We're the only country capable of leading the human
race. And we've got to do all nine of those simultaneously. Life's
complicated."
Last Updated: July 26, 2001