It's harder to make the glass than break the glass.
Without going too deep, without globalization I am not sure everyone would be able to have a supercomputer in their pocket at the low cost.
We pick on retail, I think, because each individual has experience with retail. It is easy to talk about.
Not everybody has experience in drilling for oil in the Permian Basin, but the same thing is happening in every industry everywhere in some manner.
Everybody is looking at their base business and saying, "What else is it? Sure, we do this, but while we're doing that, what else do we know about our customer, and what does that enable us to do?" That comes from the access to information and the ability to analyze it with a speed they never had. I think everybody is thinking that way.
Digitization has created opportunities for everybody to accumulate information in a way they were never able to, and analyze it with a speed that just wasn't there.
The challenges, the changes we're talking about often seem to them like unbelievable opportunities to deliver a product quicker, better. If you can improve the quality, lower the cost, and improve the turns - and you can do that because your information systems, your delivery systems, are better because of technology - well, you see that as a wonderful opportunity to gain market share.
You have to love a town where you can both smoke and gamble in a pharmacy.
We have to learn to die in every moment in order to be fully alive.
If you go back to 1800, everybody was poor. I mean everybody. The Industrial Revolution kicked in, and a lot of countries benefited, but by no means everyone.
If justice perishes, human life on Earth has lost its meaning.