Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
To join in the industrial revolution, you needed to open a factory; in the Internet revolution, you need to open a laptop.
Sooner or later the Internet will become profitable. It's an old story played before by canals, railroads and automobiles.
The new information technology... Internet and e-mail... have practically eliminated the physical costs of communications.
The state is made for man, not man for the state.... That is to say, the state should be our servant and not we its slaves
With the Internet, you can get lots of info in advance, but a local person who knows how to work the system is invaluable.
The magic words 'on the Internet,' if inserted into nearly any sentence, seem to protect it from normal critical scrutiny.
Internet news cycles are by the minute, and any fool can take a headline from the Associated Press and send it out as news.
If I get a computer and I tune it to the Internet, it will pick up the Internet from the invisible realms that I can't see.
Without the Internet I would have no fans and I wouldn't be in this business. I owe everything to the Internet and my fans.
I think it would be impossible not to be an Internet kid, coming from New Zealand, because culturally it's a little barren.
I can't pretend that I don't subscribe to Internet music culture in that I discover new music and old music simultaneously.
No system in the world is so well-designed that it can't grow stale, rigid, or corrupted by those who benefit most from it.
Kids are great. You can teach them to hate what you hate and, with the Internet and all, they practically raise themselves.
A free and open Internet should not have to be weighed down by legal challenges - its dynamism is essential to our economy.
Language itself changes slowly but the internet has speeded up the process of those changes so you notice them more quickly.
[Internet] is amazing as much as human beings can be amazing, and it's debased and depraved and vile as human beings can be.
With work increasingly invisible, it's much harder to grasp the human effects, the social contours, of the Internet economy.
I think the Internet has made things a lot easier. Twitter and Facebook let you really connect to your readers effortlessly!
I hate the Internet. It's full of rubbish. I'm on it all the time, watching terrible, useless things and ossifying my brain.
With 'posts' running in the millions, Internet message boards have become an essential part of the savvy investor's arsenal.
This is the snobbery of the people on the Mayflower looking down their noses at the people who came over ON THE SECOND BOAT!
Twitter is really a hyper-distilled version of how the internet should work - short bursts of relatively useful information.
Let's do 150 stops. Let's go to 75 universities, and let's spread this gospel of Internet entrepreneurship everywhere we go.
When you go onto the internet, if you really rummage around randomly then how do you hope to find something of any of value?
My point is, no one can stop the Internet. No one can stop that march. It doesn't mean that it's going to be smooth, though.
It should be like a driver's license - no one can have an Instagram until they're 18. It's the wild, wild west, the internet.
The Internets distinct configuration may have made cyberattacks easy to launch, but it has also kindled the flame of freedom.
Language itself changes slowly, but the Internet has speeded up the process of those changes so you notice them more quickly.
The great thing about the Internet is, it has made it easier for people who are clever and resourceful to promote themselves.
The Internet's a driving force in the change from mass media to 'my media,' in which consumers will be their own programmers.
What would make it very difficult to take society back to a repressive time would be technology. The arrival of the Internet.
Once I found out that people were really making careers for themselves off the Internet, independently, I was really inspired.
[...] to judge from the Internet postings that people have sent me, probably most of what you learned [about me] was nonsense.
Obviously there's so much about me on the Internet that you can turn against me, and you can make me into any person you want.
It's so thrilling. And not just the music. The Internet is changing the future of fund-raising. I'm thrilled by the potential.
The internet has made possible a frightening practice of threats and intimidation - threats of unspeakable violence and death.
The Internet was crucial for our success. It is a great thing. It is a big democracy because people can choose what they like.
There was a time when people felt the internet was another world, but now people realise it's a tool that we use in this world.
They don't call it the Internet anymore, they call it cloud computing. I'm no longer resisting the name. Call it what you want.
You can't gaze in the crystal ball and see the future. What the Internet is going to be in the future is what society makes it.
I absolutely believe the Internet is passing from its free days into a paid system. Inevitably, I promise you, it will be paid.
I graduated from high school in 1963. There were no computers, cell phones, Internet, credit cards, cassette tapes or cable TV.
There is a significant momentum behind the social Internet. A wide range of public investors were very enthusiastic about that.
I have a place in Costa Rica that is in the middle of the jungle. There's no Internet. There's no TV. Do I work there? Hell no.
I'm not a big internet guy - not because I'm not interested in what people have to say, but probably because I'm too interested.
I love the Internet, and I love wasting time on the Internet - even though it sometimes ends up being not being a waste of time.
The future presented by the internet is the mass amateurization of publishing and a switch from 'Why publish this?' to 'Why not?
Now, with the Internet, you're either five years ahead or you're five years behind, and the music game is catchin' up right now.
Virtual Self' was me trying to paint a picture of a very foggy, distorted memory that I had of electronic music on the internet.