Computers From Books Quotes
Collection of top 19 famous quotes about Computers From Books
Computers From Books Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Computers From Books quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
If we have nothing material to give, we can offer our attention, our energy, our appreciation. The world needs us. It doesn't deplete us to give.
— Sharon Salzberg
Computers don't kill books; people do.
— Douglas Rushkoff
In the novel we can know people perfectly, and, apart from the general pleasure of reading, we can find here a compensation for their dimness in life.
— E. M. Forster
Computers will never take the place of books. You can't stand on a floppy disk to reach a high shelf.
— Sam Ewing
Everything flows with much greater ease when people live as one with the present moment.
— Eckhart Tolle
I find it's best to remain pessimistic. At least then there's less of a blow when fate fucks you over.
— Bex-chan
To compare books to computers, I mean, computers are the way to get books. That is the medium for distributing text because it doesn't require paper.
— Nicholas Negroponte
What is childhood without stories? And how will children fall in love with stories without bookstores? You can't get that from a computer.
— Sarah Jio
When witnesses concoct lies, they often miss the obvious.
— John Grisham
The problem with being an author in this modern world is such: computers break often; books don't
— Emma Iadanza
Don't be fooled ...
If they gossip to you, they'll gossip about you. — Steve Maraboli
If they gossip to you, they'll gossip about you. — Steve Maraboli
Despite the fact that we climbed a few flights of stairs, I still feel like I'm plunging to the earth.
— Veronica Roth
I'm sure computers are useful, but next to all these warm, beautiful books they seem so cold and clinical.
— J.R. Johansson
I tried a dozen different modifications that were rejected. But they all served as a path to the final design.
— Mikhail Kalashnikov
They work now with computers for building buildings and books, but not ever with new ideas.
— Emil Ruder