Nothing good comes of reading other people's emails.
A lot of times, people send me emails, and then I forget about them, or I never respond to them, or I respond to them weeks later.
I believe in privacy, I believe that people especially when it comes to private emails, personal emails, et cetera, I think people have a right to that privacy.
What I did was permitted. My emails went to state. gov accounts. I did what I did, and I've said that it was a mistake. I've tried to do the best I could to get that information out to people.
You never let things go unanswered for too long. Emails. Phone calls. Questions. As if you know the waiting is the hardest part for me.
Playboy magazine announced that they are going to support the troops by sending them emails from Playboy playmates. After hearing this the U. S. troops said 'Just our luck, we get emails from playmates, but we're embedded with Geraldo. '
So this is why I can't agree with "don't feed the trolls. " When millionaire celebrity broadcasters and entire publications start trolling, ignoring them isn't really an option anymore. They are gradually making trolling normative. We have to start feeding the trolls: feeding them with achingly polite emails and comments, reminding them of how billions of people prefer to communicate with each other, every day, in the most unregulated arena of all: courteously.
I have given money to the Obama campaign online and now they bombard me with emails every day. Why did I do that online? Why didn't I just walk into an office?
This Hillary Clinton scandal has to do with emails. All I get are emails for Canadian Viagra.
Computers are wasteful of paper and time. Once, we'd get documents with a few errors. Now, people make hundreds of copies until each sheet is flawless and memos are duplicated endlessly. Managers get swamped with emails.
Just because you're 40, you don't have to decide whether God exists. . . when you're already worrying that the National Security Agency is reading your emails, it's better not to know whether yet another entity is watching you.
Every one of us has learned how to send emails on Sunday night. But how many of us know how to go a movie on Monday afternoon. You've unbalanced your life without balancing it with someone else.
To me, emails are a little bit frustrating. I think that the telephone is much preferred because you get the sound of the voice and the interest and everything else you can't see in an email.
For me it's much more like a little kid rebelling. The minute I was told what to do at any age, I did the opposite. Hopefully I'll do that for the rest of my life. I come from the business side and Mark comes from the creative side, but every time a decision came up about Creep it was two emails, and we agreed. I've not had that ever with someone on the creative or the business side.
I got a lot of texts from friends and emails from friends and most of them were just pure jealousy.
There are huge creative advantages in having huge chunks of time when no one can find you. Emails and phones have diluted the experience of travel.
I love flying so much. I even airplane food. No one bothers you and your phone never goes off and you can't have emails go through. It's undisturbed.
I don't understand the iPhone. I just don't get it. Don't ya'll have to write serious emails throughout the day? How can you possibly manage detailed missives on a phone with no keys?
There are the Podesta emails we've been publishing. [John] Podesta is Hillary Clinton's primary campaign manager, so there's a thread that runs through all these emails; there are quite a lot of pay-for-play, as they call it, giving access in exchange for money to states, individuals and corporations.
I get more emails and calls when it comes to money than probably any other single person on television when it comes to money.