Karen Casella

Karen Casella is a software engineer and advocate for inclusion in the technology industry. She is an engineering leader at Netflix and previously held leadership positions at eBay and SHOP.COM. She was also named a Lesbians Who Tech LGBTQ Tech and Innovation fellow.

Early life and education

Karen Casella grew up on the South Shore in Massachusetts. She attended Worcester Polytechnic Institute, graduating in 1983 with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering.[1]

Career

Casella began her career at Maxtor, a company that manufactured hard disk drives. In 1993, she became a software engineer and architect at Sun Microsystems.[1] After 11 years at Sun, she served as Director of Application Architecture at eBay, Inc. and then became Vice President of Site Development at SHOP.COM in 2005. In 2008, she was promoted to Vice President of Engineering, and in 2010, she became Senior Vice President of Engineering, leading the SHOP.COM engineering team and managing software development, quality assurance, and worldwide site operations.[2] She is currently the engineering leader of Netflix's Edge & Playback Access teams, which ensure that users are viewing content securely.[3] In this position, she oversaw the implementation of the download feature, which allows users to download content onto their devices to watch without access to the Internet.[1]

Advocacy work

Casella also advocates for inclusion of women, the LGBTQ community, and other underrepresented groups in technology. In 2017, she hosted a panel on diversity and inclusion in technology at the QCon software architecture conference.[4] She was also selected as an LGBTQ Tech and Innovation fellow by Lesbians Who Tech. In this fellowship, she served as an engineering lead for an app, funded by the Tegan and Sara Foundation, which helps young queer women find mentors in their career area of interest.[1]

gollark: But it tells you the email, no?
gollark: It's so easy to do some things in CSS, but some things, like vertical alignment (before flexbox, anyway) and styling native browser UI is so annoyingly hard.
gollark: It took SIGNIFICANT effort to make this `<select>` look like this.
gollark: Unrelatedly, here is a picture of one of my eternally unfinished projects, with eternally kind of weird styling.
gollark: Interesting.

References

  1. "Invisible Engineering". WPI. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
  2. "SHOP.COMâ„¢ Announces Executive Team Promotions". Market Wired. 2010-02-05.
  3. Sandler, Julie Bort, Rachel. "The 39 most powerful female engineers of 2018". Business Insider. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
  4. "Karen Casella | QCon San Francisco 2017". karen-casella.html. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
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