Education
Born Christiane Riedl, she began her career studying mathematics at the University of Vienna, where she completed her Doctor of Philosophy in 1966.
university professor computer scientist
Born Christiane Riedl, she began her career studying mathematics at the University of Vienna, where she completed her Doctor of Philosophy in 1966.
In 1978, she became the first female professor of computer science in Germany, and was a pioneer of evolutionary participatory software design—a precursor to open-source software development. From 1966 to 1968, she worked as a systems programmer using an ALGOL 60 compiler at Siemens in Munich, Germany. From 1968 to 1973, she worked at the computer science department of Stanford University in the United States as a research associate and part-time lecturer.
In 1973, she joined the Munich software development company Softlab, where she worked as a senior consultant and was involved in the development and demonstration of Maestro I, the first integrated development environment for software.
In 1978, became a full professor of software engineering at the Technical University of Berlin—the first woman to be a professor in the field of computer science in Germany. From 1991, she was head of the software engineering group at the University of Hamburg. and her group produced one of the first conceptual contributions to participatory design methods with the STEPS process model (Software Technology for Evolutionary Participatory Systems development). retired from academia in 2008, remaining a professor emerita at Hamburg.
She has since been involved with the Vienna University of Technology WIT project (Wissenschaftlerinnenkolleg Internettechnologien. Women"s Postgraduate College for Internet Technologies), which offers a specialised Doctor of Philosophy program for women in the computer science field was granted an honorary professorship at Technology Union Wien on 26 January 2012.