Fortune and cowsay get egalitarian
Fortune is a simple program that displays a pseudo-random message from a database of quotations that first appeared in Version 7 of Unix and runs on the command line on Unix-like systems.
Cowsay is another simple program running on the command line which generates ASCII pictures of a cow with a message.
I have used fortune and cowsay in the past to demonstrate the use of a pipe | which feeds the output of one program and uses it as the input for the next program.
Today running fortune | cowsay yielded the message in the image below.

The message is most apposite as half the human race is under-represented in IT and other technical fields.
In March this year The Guardian reported as follows:
In 2005, women made up 24% of computer science students. By 2010, that figure had dropped to 19%, according to the Higher Education Statistics Agency. A 2012 report from Creative Skillset found that only 29% of the interactive media industry in the UK is female, and the majority hold positions in art and design and communications rather than engineering.
The Guardian’s report concluded that
There is a long way to go before there is parity between the genders in the technology industry. But every baby step made has a tiny effect on the representational content of the diverse audience that uses software and hardware. Developers are known to develop solutions for themselves.









One of the Act’s results was the creation of the