Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Gordon Bell

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businessman Gordon Bell.
Last updated on November 18, 2024.
Gordon Bell

Chester Gordon Bell is an American electrical engineer and manager. An early employee of Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) 1960–1966, Bell designed several of their PDP machines and later became Vice President of Engineering 1972–1983, overseeing the development of the VAX. Bell's later career includes entrepreneur, investor, founding Assistant Director of NSF's Computing and Information Science and Engineering Directorate 1986–1987, and researcher emeritus at Microsoft Research, 1995–2015.

I started working occasionally for my father when I was around six. The first skill I learned was how to join a plug to a wire.
People have no memory of phone numbers now because of the cell phone - their address book is in a cell phone.
I'm on Facebook and Twitter, and occasionally I will tweet something. Somehow my problem is that I don't think I have anything interesting to tweet about. β€” Β© Gordon Bell
I'm on Facebook and Twitter, and occasionally I will tweet something. Somehow my problem is that I don't think I have anything interesting to tweet about.
My mother had been a grade-school teacher, and my father had an eighth-grade education.
I don't think forgetting is an important feature of human memory. I think it's important to be able to remember things accurately.
Well, I got to have a project. I'm not a blue-sky guy at all. I'd never let anybody like me loose in a company.
I tend to always carry a camera with me. I live next to a fire station, and I've got lots of photos of the hook and ladder coming out of the house. And I like food, so I tend to photograph wonderfully presented food all the time. To me those are very pleasant memories.
Computer scientists are the historians of computing.
I've never seen a job being done by a five-hundred-person engineering team that couldn't be done better by fifty people.
The most reliable components are the ones you leave out.
The cheapest, fastest, and most reliable components are those that aren't there.
Every big computing disaster has come from taking too many ideas and putting them in one place.
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