But while the number of women who use computers is increasing, fewer and fewer are studying computer science at university.
It seems that women are shying away from the very careers that would give them their best shot at gaining influence and making a difference in the 21st Century.
One of the most commonly cited reasons for not pursuing careers in technology is its image. Many women, particularly young women, think that technology careers are geeky, anti-social and even boring.
The truth is somewhat different. Some of the most influential people are web developers, engineers, video game programmers, 3D effects creators and industrial designers, who are using technology to revolutionise the tools and content that shape our world.
The technologies they create are shaping our homes, workplaces, media and worldview.
Going digital
For women to take their place as equal partners in the future, women who study psychology should also study human computer interaction.
Women who study law should take their place among the policy-makers who, every day, are making immense decisions about privacy, the digital divide, free speech and child protection.
Women who love history should learn how knowledge management, archiving, and content storage are setting the stage for a complete overhaul of the museum experience.
And women who want to teach should also play a role in building e-learning systems that people actually use.
Being able to design computer interfaces, influence privacy policy, build interactive museums and create teaching tools is what women throughout history have fought for.
Even when societal norms and the legal system made it nearly impossible for women to work in information technology, they stood their ground so that today, women who want to shape technology can do just that.
History of invention
Looking at the history books shows that women have been creating new technologies for centuries.
There are probably even more women inventors than most people are aware of, given that until the passage of the Married Women's Property Act, everything owned or invented by a woman was legally her husband's possession.
Still, the patent records show how much women have contributed to the world of technology:
Yet many women shy away from the careers that will give them a chance to make the biggest difference, in part just because they do not understand them.
Shaping technology
Women still think that shaping technology means sitting alone at a desk, staring at a screen and writing code.
In fact shaping technology means thinking creatively, understanding people's needs and inventing new ways of communicating and working together.
Tomorrow's leading artists, politicians, managers and interior designers will all use and shape technology in order to succeed.
If women were shaping technology perhaps the next windscreen wiper would emerge alongside an entirely new web browser and cars that suit a woman's way of life.
Anita Borg of Xerox PARC in California holds workshops that bring women from all walks of life together to brainstorm new technologies.
"If women were more involved in creating new technologies," says Ms Borg, "cars would have a place for you to put your handbag."