Computers get better faster than anything else ever.
I have a degree in finance and these things kind of all go beyond me in a sense. I have a degree from a long time ago before computers.
There are wavelengths that people cannot see, there are sounds that people cannot hear, and maybe computers have thoughts that people cannot think.
Computer science is one of the worst things that ever happened to either computers or to science.
Only by counting could humans demonstrate their independence of computers.
I am interested in computers and technology, and art, photography, and design.
If you don't know anything about computers, just remember that they are machines that do exactly what you tell them but often surprise you in the result.
I was allowed to have an imagination rather than a need to be entertained all the time by television or computers or anything like that. So, I think it's helpful to try and give your kids.
If chess is a vast jungle, computers are the chainsaws in a giant environmentally insensitive logging company.
Computers shouldn't be unusable. You don't need to know how to work a telephone switch to make a phone call, or how to use the Hoover Dam to take a shower, or how to work a nuclear-power plant to turn on the lights.
[Computer science] is not really about computers and it's not about computers in the same sense that physics is not really about particle accelerators, and biology is not about microscopes and Petri dishes. . . and geometry isn't really about using surveying instruments.
To model correctly one tranche of one CDO took about three hours on one of the fastest computers in the United States. There is no chance that pretty much anybody understood what they were doing with these securities. Creating things that you don't understand is really not a good idea no matter who owns it.
I had one typewriter for 50 years, but I have bought seven computers in six years. I suppose that's why Bill Gates is rich, and Underwood is out of business.
When Colin Powell showed up as Secretary of State in 2001, most State Department employees still didn't even have computers on their desks. When I got there they were not mostly permitted to have handheld devices. I mean, so you're thinking how do we operate in this new environment dominated by technology, globalizing forces? We have to change, and I can't expect people to change if I don't try to model it and lead it.
Things have changed so much now. Everything is downloaded onto computers. I'm not a computer-savvy guy, but with downloading the movie industry has changed.
Think? Why think! We have computers to do that for us.
Today, computers are almost second nature to most of us.
Computers themselves, and software yet to be developed, will revolutionize the way we learn.
I understand that computers, which I once believed to be but a hermaphrodite typewriter-cum-filing cabinet, offer the cyber literate increased ability to communicate. I do not think this is altogether a bad thing, however it may appear on the surface.
I'm a Luddite with computers, and I'm slightly worried about being hacked as well.