I'm a Luddite with computers, and I'm slightly worried about being hacked as well.
There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark.
It would take a lot of time and effort (to repair the computers). And they can't run (programs and games) kids are interested in today. They're not even on the Internet. We wouldn't be offering them much of a carrot.
When things are digital, they're all 1's and zero's, and so they commingle in ways we didn't anticipate and you could do things that were not like publishing or television, or computers, but were some intersection of those and that got known to be convergence, so between the switching, or trading of places and the convergence, you have today's media.
Although computers allow people to talk at the speed of light, no one talks that fast.
I think we are at the very beginning of high changes, not only in terms of digital film, but in the way the movies will be screened, whether they'll be screened on phones, on computers - on everything
For every door the computers have closed they have opened a new one.
I like computers. I like the Internet. It's a tool that can be used. But don't be misled into thinking that these technologies are anything other than aspects of a degenerate economic system.
Computers aren't intelligent, they only think they are.
Man should rule with computers, not vice versa.
Supercomputers will achieve one human brain capacity by 2010, and personal computers will do so by about 2020.
Economists are like computers. They need to have facts punched into them.
The real danger is not that computers will begin to think like men, but that men will begin to think like computers.
Computers make me totally blank out.
Computers don't lie, but liars can compute.
With the technology of tablet computers, if we bring the right content to them and distribute them ubiquitously throughout the land, we can do something about America being ranked 29th in the world in terms of our level of education.
We can open up our computers and Skype with someone, and we see them. It's like looking through a window. And we can surf the internet through our phones, and it's like our consciousness is far away. Or we can step through a airplane door and be in another continent a few hours away. So technology feels, to me, like the doors sort of already exist, at least emotionally.
Any nitwit can understand computers, and many do.
If computers are the wave of the future, displays are the surfboards.
In the early days, computers inspired widespread awe and the popular press dubbed them giant brains. In fact, the computer's power resembled that of a bulldozer; it did not harness subtlety, though subtlety went into its design.