Jamaican software engineer
Kamilah Taylor is a Jamaican software engineer; she is known for advocating for women and people of color in the tech industry.
Early life and education
Taylor was born in Jamaica, to parents Ashley Hamilton-Taylor and Delta Taylor.[1] Her parents still reside in Jamaica, where her father is a computer science lecturer at University of the West Indies, and her mother is a teacher at St. Andrew's Prep School.[1]
In Taylor's earlier years, she attended Mona Preparatory School in Kingston, Jamaica until the fifth grade. She completed middle school at Holcomb Bridge and attended North Spring Charter high school in Atlanta.[2] Both of which were magnet schools centered around advanced math and sciences, as well as performing arts.[2] She obtained a bachelor's degree in math and computer science from the University of the West Indies.[2] She also earned a master's degree in computer science with a concentration in robotics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[2]
Career
Taylor's career started at Wolfram Research, Inc directly after completing graduate school.[1][3] In late 2011, she applied to LinkedIn and joined the company in 2012 as a software engineer.[1][4] Taylor led the infrastructure and flagship app integrations on the LinkedIn Learning app.[2][5] In 2017, she was noted as one of Business Insider’s most powerful female engineers in the United States for her work with LinkedIn.[5] Taylor was involved via Google chat in the Girls in ICT Caribbean hackathon, which was held in Jamaica, Trinidad, and Barbados — International Girls in ICT Day in 2017.[2]
An engineering manager for Uber tried recruiting Taylor for a developer position at the San Francisco startup. However, she declined the position due to a major sexual harassment controversy with the company. The female manager replied telling her that “sexism is systemic in tech”, which then sparked some backlash via Twitter.[6][7][8]
Taylor is a co-author of the book, Women in Tech.[4][2]
References