A Quote by James H. Clark

I believe that the Internet is the information highway. I'm religious about this. I don't think it's cable television. — © James H. Clark
I believe that the Internet is the information highway. I'm religious about this. I don't think it's cable television.
Cable television and the Internet have created an unending demand for information, and there simply isn't enough truth to go around.
I just don't need cable news. There's nothing that happens on cable news that I don't already know. I'm talking about just the acquisition of information, learning things. What is on cable TV is not that. Cable news isn't news. What is happening on cable news right now is a political assassination of not just Donald Trump, but of ideas and cultural mores that I believe in.
I think the Internet is absolutely extraordinary. It's very, very useful and I think one of the things we've got to do is make sure that the African continent gets on to that information super highway.
I don't even see it as cable TV anymore. I've been called 'Larry the Cable Guy' for so long, I don't even think about it being about cable. I don't know anything about cable.
Television, cable, the Internet, that's knocked the boundaries down.
It's been my policy to view the Internet not as an 'information highway,' but as an electronic asylum filled with babbling loonies.
It's been my policy to view the Internet not as an 'information highway', but as an electronic asylum filled with babbling loonies.
The 1990 'Goodwill Games' can be another indication that the television world is not divided between commercial and cable. If the viewer thinks highly of our efforts... they will have a higher opinion of cable television and TBS.
The Information Highway intrigues me because I have always been a newshound; I have always been curious about why people believe what they believe.
The justices have constitutionally protected obscenity in libraries, filth over cable television, and now unlimited internet pornography.
The Internet goes doot-doot-doot - it goes sideways. There's nothing hierarchical about it. And the best thing about it is also the worst thing about it, which is there are no gatekeepers on the Internet. Consequently, there's a whole lot of bad information on the Internet. But I think that sorts itself out over time.
With the recession, people are having to choose between their cable and their internet connection. And think about it.
I think Ronald Reagan is what happened....The age of Reagan brought conservatism into the mainstream....It also brought us the beginning of the new media-talk radio, the internet, cable television.
With the rise of cable, network is clearly floundering because the characters on cable are far more fascinating than they are on network. Network television is trying to figure it out. Network television really relies on story rather than character, and cable relies on character.
I got the Fire Stick as a gift at the Amazon Emmys after-party in 2015, and because I haven't lived in a house with cable television since I lived with my parents as a child, I've just streamed everything. I can afford cable. I have a television. But I only stream things.
The days of television as we knew it growing up are over. You have a bigger, wider world audience on the Internet, larger than any American television series. People don't watch television in the same context as before. Nowadays they watch their television on the Internet at their convenience. That's the whole wave, and it's now - not the future.
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