Top 101 Quotes & Sayings by Mitch Kapor - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businessman Mitch Kapor.
Last updated on April 19, 2025.
We are living in an era of anxiety produced by computer and communications technology.
I'm like George Lucas, bringing together a creative team that will come up with a unique, well-crafted product.
Velano Vascular has developed a simple, game-changing innovation that will improve the way medicine has been practiced for decades. — © Mitch Kapor
Velano Vascular has developed a simple, game-changing innovation that will improve the way medicine has been practiced for decades.
Few industries have the ability to transform society like tech, yet too few companies are asking the questions or working on the problems that would create meaningful social change.
Human intelligence is a marvelous, subtle, and poorly understood phenomenon. There is no danger of duplicating it anytime soon.
Diversifying our tech talent pool is an imperative for the tech sector. More diverse engineers and entrepreneurs will bring about a new type of innovation that Silicon Valley has yet to see.
Often, the disconnect between the marketing hype around a new product and what the product actually does is astounding.
I think there is widespread agreement that there is a crisis in public education.
Linden Lab's technological breakthroughs have made 'Second Life' a truly revolutionary experience.
Physicians today, as human beings, are not exempt from the perverse economic pressures created by fee-for-service regimes to see more patients for shorter appointments and order more tests and procedures. If the incentives were changed to pay to foster better health outcomes, I am convinced physician behavior would change over time.
E-mail is a victim of its own success.
When new technology in the classroom starts happening, some people get very excited and think of it as a panacea. It attracts very high amounts of money; it raises expectations, and those expectations aren't met.
The computer environment is radically different today. In the 1980s, it was like the Wild West, with a lot of open territory. Now, the cowboys have moved out and the farmers have moved in.
It is possible to take a population of students who are failing and whose schools are failing them, who are being written off as not being college material, and if they have the right support, they can all go to college and succeed.
There's a great deal of suspicion and misunderstanding about IT among practicing doctors. One hears things like, 'I don't want to be turned into a data entry clerk, and I don't want some machine between me and my patients.'
There's an admirable belief about the virtues of meritocracy - that the best ideas prove the best results. It's a wrong and misguided belief by well-intentioned people.
Open source can propagate to fill all the nooks and crannies that people want it to fill.
I originally invested in Dropcam because I foresaw what the company and their products could do for consumers and the industry. I've been deeply impressed with what they've done in such little time, and I'm confident that they'll continue to exceed my expectations.
Successful entrepreneurs develop products that inspire their passion. They have to. It's that passion that gets them through the long, arduous, uncertain and frightening early days of a start-up.
StumbleUpon has humanized the Web and mastered a way for people to discover online content by incorporating an individual's personal preferences and recommendations of friends and like-minded people.
Every year we are greeted by a host of new apps that will 'change the way we think' about ordering takeout, 'fundamentally transform' our shoe purchases, or 'revolutionize' the way we edit photos.
In an economy where more and more value is in information - is in the bits, not the atoms, where bits can be copied essentially for free - any time you have that situation, economic schemes that rely on existing models of intellectual property laws for protection are going to do less and less well.
The widespread adoption of broadband and the continued advances in personal computing technology are finally making it possible for the collective creation of an online world on a realistic scale.
The more you eliminate the inefficient use of information, the better it is for productivity.
Life in cyberspace seems to be shaping up exactly like Thomas Jefferson would have wanted: founded on the primacy of individual liberty and a commitment to pluralism, diversity, and community.
When regulations restricting competition are relaxed, nobody's market share is protected. If telephone companies can offer video programming, cable revenue will surely drop.
I believe in having an impact in doing things.
We have a responsibility to give people opportunities to do what they can do. It's a fundamental tenet of democratic society. Libertarians who believe in a completely minimalist state, and don't feel we have that responsibility, are harming humanity.
Jazz was a bomb. That was also the low point of Mac sales. People had just written it off. — © Mitch Kapor
Jazz was a bomb. That was also the low point of Mac sales. People had just written it off.
It's illegitimate to talk about a post-scarcity Utopia without talking about questions of distribution. There have always been these Utopian predictions - 'electricity too cheap to meter' was the atomic promise of the 1950s.
I give Bill Gates an A for vision because, as a business person and a strategist, he's brilliant. His flaw is that his view is not informed by a humanistic or compassionate vision of how to make computers work for people.
The kind of products you envision as an entrepreneur is a function of your life experience.
Microsoft represents the best of ourselves or the worst.
We have to examine very carefully any privacy-reducing technology.
Lotus's efforts around the Mac were pathetically unsuccessful, which is sad.
There are excellent public interest grounds to have a search engine whose rankings are transparent.
Reversing the escalation of health care costs is going to need more than legislation, yet it can be done without imposing rationing, as critics of reform fear.
If we're not creating an educated and skilled workforce, there is just no conceivable way that were going to be economically competitive.
I routinely failed to understand that 'simple and straightforward' would have been a much better product strategy for Lotus.
You can't be in the tech community... without realizing there's a big shortage of talent.
Old ways of thinking die hard, particularly when they were weaned by legally enforced monopolies.
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