+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

This 22-year-old college senior was the first woman in the US to win an IBM mainframe coding contest

Mar 25, 2018, 19:35 IST

IBM

Advertisement
  • A 22-year-old senior at the University of North Texas was the first woman in the U.S. to win an IBM mainframe coding competition.
  • Anne McKee started coding just three years ago with a class at a local community college.
  • McKee was one of three global winners among 17,000 students that participated in this year's competition.
  • Mainframes are still widely in use at banks, insurance companies, and other big businesses that handle lots of credit card transactions.

You might think of the mainframe computer as long-gone relic of the Cold War. But banks, especially, still rely on modern versions of the old classic: They're huge and old-fashioned, sure, but they're also proven to be mega-reliable.

Fast forward to today, and meet Anna McKee, a 22-year-old college senior at the University of North Texas, who was named the winner of the IBM Master of the Mainframe programming contest last week - making her the first woman from North America to take the title.

"I started saying 'oh my gosh' repeatedly and my poor parents who I was on the phone with thought I got into a car accident or something," McKee told Business Insider, of the moment she won. "And then they just started yelling on the other end. They were so excited. It was awesome."

McKee was, truly, shocked that she would win. She had only started coding three years earlier, starting with a class at a local community college. She entered the contest thinking she would have a hard time even completing it. She never thought she actually stood a chance. In fact, she only competed because both of her parents work with mainframes, and urged her to enter.

Advertisement

Her prizes: A $2,750 travel stipend to go to the closest IBM head office to meet with executives and recruiters; an HTC Vive virtual reality headset; a "Master of the Mainframe" hoodie.

The learning curve

The mainframe might have fallen out of favor, as PCs, smartphones, and now cloud computing give people access to so much computing power in much smaller packages. The problem is that, even though mainframes are still so critical at many businesses, programming novices are getting drawn to the newer platforms, causing a huge skills shortage.

That's part of why IBM has run the Master of the Mainframe competition since 2005, as a way to entice students to learn the intracicies of the mainframe.

"We really want to give students a learning opportunity on one of the world's biggest enterprise IT platforms," Meredith Stowell, director of community engagement and skills for IBM's Mainframe team, told Business Insider.

IBM zEnterprise System mainframe

Advertisement

This year saw the biggest turnout in the contest's history: 17,000 students, 23% of which were women, all competed McKee was the only woman to place among the 15 global and regional winners.

"I had no idea I was the the first female win in North America," said McKee. "I was just trying to do the best I could."

Master of the Mainframe

The Master of the Mainframe competition takes the form of three rounds of challenges, culminating in a stage that requires contestants to build their own application by sorting and tracking data from over 600 companies. Contestants connect to a IBM mainframe virtually, from a terminal on their own computer.

Contestants have three months to complete the Master of the Mainframe challenge. McKee finished in two weeks.

"I worked day and night to complete it," McKee said. "Everything else, my homework and everything, was put on the back burner."

Advertisement

In high school, McKee was particularly adept at math and music, but didn't know how that could translate into a career. On a whim, during the summer after her freshman year of college, McKee enrolled in a basic C++ programming course at a nearby community college. She struggled through it, but she was "intrigued" and decided to sign up for a class in the Java programming language.

IBM

That's when things changed. She enjoyed programming in Java so much, she declared a major in business computer information systems. She also joined the Association for Information Systems, a professional association for the IT industry.

And she's noticed a promising change, too. Over the past year, McKee said, more women have been attending AIS meetings. A few weeks before IBM told McKee she won Master of the Mainframe, she noticed something unusual at the latest AIS meeting: the room was about 50% women.

"It's something that really surprised me and I really hope that things are shifting so that more women are getting into technology," she said.

Advertisement

NOW WATCH: African-American inventors who improved the world

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article