A Quote by Gordon Moore

Most of what I learned as an entrepreneur was by trial and error. — © Gordon Moore
Most of what I learned as an entrepreneur was by trial and error.
I never learned from a real trainer so it was trial and error. Mostly error.
I had 11 years of managerial experience and four years of coaching before I managed a big-league team. To me, it was important, because I learned a lot through trial and error. And it's tough to have to go through trial and error when you're a big-league manager.
'Victory Lap,' even the title. It's the accumulation of trial and error; that's what I represent; trial and error.
If you ask most smart or successful people where they learned their craft, they will not talk to you about their time in school. It's always a mentor, a particularly transformative job, or a period of experimentation or trial and error.
Sometimes, we find what we want by also finding out what you don't want. All of that is trial and error. Once you're in that pit, the trial and error is important. It's up to us; we've got to keep moving forward.
I didn't go to no school for acting. I learned it all by trial and error.
Whatever humans have learned had to be learned as a consequence only of trial and error experience. Humans have learned only through mistakes.
As counterintuitive as it sounds, 'speed to fail' should be every entrepreneur's motto. Success isn't born wholly-formed like Venus from a clamshell; it's developed through relentless trial and error.
You don't learn from a situation where you do something well. You enjoy it and you give yourself credit, but you don't really learn from that. You learn from trial and error, trial and error, all the time.
All I have learned through trial and error is to stay alert and aware, especially God smiling @ our silliness.
I learned to cook by watching and helping my mother in the kitchen. I also learned by trial and error. Even though I'm big on recipes, I love to make up my own dishes and when you take a risk in the kitchen, you learn a lot about food!
I say most of my music is very trial-and-error.
Most intuitive ideas have to be clarified, so there is a trial and error process.
Almost everything I've learned about journalism has been from other friends who are journalists, taking advantage of the money I hope they don't think they threw away at j-school. I studied comparative literature, but the professional vagaries of journalism I've learned through other people's trial and error, and my own.
science progresses by trial and error, and when it is forbidden to admit error there can be no progress.
Learn to fail with pride - and do so fast and cleanly. Maximise trial and error - by mastering the error part.
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