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It's nice to read about Daubechies here on HN. I remember reading a few of her papers circa 2006 for an academic project. At the time I was accustomed (prejudiced, maybe) to see mostly male authors in all the papers I used, and I was a bit surprised to learn that the I in "I. Daubechies" meant Ingrid. I'm happy to see her still going, her work is awesome.
I had the opposite experience when I met Jan Hesthaven at a GR conference. Turns out it is a German man's name and not a woman, which I found out after professing how much I love the hard 'J' versions book on spectral methods for time dependent problems.
What is GR? General relativity?

So there are two Jan Hesthavens? One (a man) who works in GR and another (a woman) who works in signal processing or time series analysis?

Sounds like they went around the conference talking about Jan (as in Janet), when other attendants knew this work was by Jan (Yan).
Back in 2014 I went to a seminar she gave about, among other things, the forgery detection work. The basic idea seemed both simple and clever: a forger is trying to match the original painting or style as exactly as possible, and so paints more slowly and carefully, and this introduces more slight wobble in the strokes.
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Here's a radical request.

A living wage for non-tenured faculty.

adjunct faculty teaching a full load (2/2) make a very nice wage at my uni (~70k). the problem isn't the wage but the exactly what non-tenure implies: lack of job security.
Does class size matter? i.e. Does the adjunct have to generate (> 100%) funding for their pay?
honestly i'm not sure. the particular adjunct i have in mind teaches one large lecture style class and a smaller (but still larger than topics class size) elective class.
Here's a thought - people should be paid the market wage. If you want to pay them more, then what are you waiting for?
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I think the climate in departments at big universities has significantly improved now that the oldest faculty members are dying off in earnest. People who deserve tenure are unable to get it due to decades of administrative creep, while the worst offenders often remain protected by it. Daubechies is brilliant and was also involved in the "Eigenfaces" work that made the rounds a few years ago, and is also an excellent instructor and lecturer. Her presence has elevated the Duke math department for years.
That could certainly be true if Universities were 40 years old.
I enjoy reading articles about science and research and it doesn't matter what the authors sex or race is. Once I start feeling like I'm being preached to however it makes it much more difficult to enjoy the actual story.