I'm a PC guy.

Speak your mind; you don't have to be PC.

We don't consider ourselves a PC company.

PC Music is a really post-modern attempt at pop.

I'm not going to be some kind of PC, tree-hugger.

I'm a huge gamer, everything from PC to Xbox to PS2.

I'm too blunt, too matter-of-fact and not PC enough.

When I was 11, I started building games for IBM PC XT.

When the PC was launched, people knew it was important.

In general, the PC's always had a fairly decent tie to GDP.

I'm up before 6, but then I'm parked in front of the PC until noon.

The PC is becoming a truck. Everybody is using a tablet and a phone.

We've seen the power of the PC, and we've seen that it's unstoppable.

I've always wanted to be a PC Music girl, like Hannah Diamond or SOPHIE.

We are not even close to finishing the basic dream of what the PC can be.

I have a PC. My sons have a Mac and swear by it, but I have a couple PC's.

I definitely don't want to appropriate... not in an 'overly PC' way though.

We will not bow down to the winds of PC culture whichever way they may blow.

I play PC and Xbox games at home, and I just got a PSP as a birthday present.

I like the PC market. It's a big market, but it's a very volatile market as well.

The PC is going to become one key product in an ever-expanding array of products.

The way of creating believable characters is not by conforming to a set of PC rules.

Back in the 1980s, you could learn how to add memory cards to your PC in a Radio Shack.

I'm not PC all the time in my phrasing, because that meets a wall; people won't hear it.

I know there's a farmer out there somewhere who never wants a PC and that's fine with me.

The PC is an important part of our business and will continue to be for a long, long time.

When I see some of the work in the commercial PC sector, some of our top focus is in India.

Sports culture is not PC or far left. There are no safe spaces in the field of competition.

Microsoft was not a mysterious, strange entity. You put your PC on and there's an ad for them.

I believe Microsoft has every right to operate a PC app store and to curate it how they choose.

The PC way of handling culture has been to not talk about it. But we should be talking about it.

If all we wanted to do was to make money on PC hardware, that wouldn't be a good business model.

I think we have gone too far into the PC culture, but there's a limit to how far we can take that.

Tablets are more intuitive than a PC or laptop. They also have more real estate than a smartphone.

We own 18 percent of just the PC business. Now that's only about 60 percent of our business today.

The new generation of consoles has as much power to do the kind of games that we do as the PC does.

On open platforms like PC, Mac, and Android, Epic's goal is to bring its games directly to customers.

From our perspective, there's been a price war in the PC industry since we opened for business in 1985.

I'd love personally... this is not an announcement at all, but I would love to see 'Fable 2' on the PC.

It's easier to add things on to a PC than it's ever been before. It's one click, and boom, it comes down.

From a narrative perspective, 'Blue Shift' for the PC and 'Blue Shift' for the Dreamcast are very similar.

The PC business is not about price, it's about value, or what you can give the customer for his or her money.

There's so much PC police. There's so much, 'You can't do this, you can't do that.' We're the exact opposite.

If any PC manufacturer has made money selling PCs retail in the last 10 years, I'd like to know who they are.

Our goal is to have YouTube on every screen - to take it from the PC to the living room and the mobile phone.

The PC rebellion is about a reaction against the media academic complex, which tells us what to say - or else.

Just as we could have rode into the sunset, along came the Internet, and it tripled the significance of the PC.

I like producing beats, and I like rapping, too. I have a program for the PC, and I can hook my keyboard to it.

I discovered shooting and filmmaking around the time all of the software became affordable to anyone with a PC.

Health care missed the PC and Internet revolutions, but it can't afford to miss the cloud and mobile revolution.

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