Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
That's one small way brogrammer culture is actually useful.
But it's not the only instance that critics cite of the "brogrammer" mentality.
And welcome to the world of the "brogrammer."
The term brogrammer is a joke, of course.
The word is used as a modifier for compound terms such as "brogrammer" and "curlbro".
They use the word 'brogrammer '
A brogrammer might self-describe as a sociable programmer.
The spotlight on Silicon Valley's brogrammer problem has focused on some of the worst public offenders.
The phenomenon of fraternity-like environments among technology teams of startup firms has been termed brogrammer culture.
And then there's GoDaddy, the web registrar that some call the godfather of the "brogrammer" mind-set.
Sensitive brogrammer unfairly misunderstood.
Douglas Macmillan of Bloomberg Businessweek has referred to this phenomenon as "brogrammer culture."
Witness a thread on Quora where members of the site satirically submit answers to the question, "How does a programmer become a brogrammer."
A brogrammer (portmanteau of bro and programmer) is a slang term for a macho, male programmer.
Many blame the industry's growing gender gap on a "brogrammer" culture, a hybrid of "bro" and "programmer" that's become a tongue-in-check name for engineers.
In a dissenting article in Gizmodo, Sam Biddle argues that the sexist effect of the brogrammer culture has been overblown by the press.
While some considered the product and the presentation to be humorous satire, Titstare was accused of adding to the institutionalized sexism, known as brogrammer culture, in the American tech industry.
"I just feel terrible about this whole thing," Van Horn told CNN Friday, noting that, flying in the face of the "brogrammer" stereotype, he's a married man (he live-streamed his proposal online).
Lee, a journalist and author who, among many projects, works with Web startup Upworthy, said the aforementioned Super Bowl ad, and others like it, show that a "brogrammer" mind-set can have consequences for the company involved.
But the rise of the brogrammer joke and its ensuing backlash has some benefits: It helps talented women choose worthy employers, it gives a name and face to a problem that plagues the industry and it publicly shames some of the most sexist offenders.
The term "brogrammer" (a mash-up of "programmer" and "bro," the stereotypical fraternity-house salute) has sprung up recently as a sarcastic take on this new breed of Silicon Valley (or New York, or Chicago, or wherever else techies assemble) computing entrepreneurs.
Seattle Attic was founded in the summer of 2013, as a response to the misogyny shown by the brogrammer culture that sees hackerspaces as 'male' spaces, and was the first Feminist Hackerspace in the United States soon followed by Double Union, in San Francisco.
To the extent that women are under-represented in Silicon Valley technology firms, and that they are underpaid, it's probably linked to the fact that some women who might be qualified to do those jobs feel unwelcome within what is still a "brogrammer" culture in many parts of the technology world, simply because of their gender.