A Quote by Marc Bolan

I don't like telephones. — © Marc Bolan
I don't like telephones.
I don't like telephones: I don't like when they ring. Just because it rings, you have to pick it up. I don't even like opening mail; I'm weird.
Saying that cultural objects have value is like saying that telephones have conversations.
When you consider that our technology has advanced from the first telephones to smart phones in roughly a century, it's easy to understand why it seems like tomorrow is arriving faster than it ever did.
Uber exists because of mobile telephones.
The streets, at least in this part of town, seemed impossibly clean in comparison to London. The public telephones were unvandalised. For a London telephone booth to look like that it would have to be guarded around the clock by the SAS.
Not since the steam engine has any invention disrupted business models like the Internet. Whole industries including music distribution, yellow-pages directories, landline telephones, and fax machines have been radically reordered by the digital revolution.
A nerd is someone who uses a telephone to talk to other people about telephones.
First electricity, now telephones. Sometimes I feel as if I'm living in an H.G. Wells novel.
Ah, one favor: if he telephones again, tell him it's no use, that I've gone out.
Things are no longer what they seem to be. My telephones are haunted, and animals whisper at me from unseen places.
I'd play every day if I could. It's cheaper than a shrink and there are no telephones on my golf cart.
I've tried plenty of telephones. I tried to get into the Samsung Galaxy and the Blackberry, but the iPhone is just too easy to use. The camera takes clear pictures and the phone itself looks great. Like all Apple products, it kind of just makes sense.
The earth has become one big village, with telephones laid on from one end to the other, and air transport, both speedy and safe.
I need to go someplace faraway that doesn't have telephones and doesn't have a record player and doesn't have movie theaters and people walking down the street in order to not do anything.
letters are venerable; and the telephone valiant, for the journey is a lonely one, and if bound together by notes and telephones we went in company, perhaps - who knows? - we might talk by the way.
Using telephones, they would be so intrusive and would really disrupt the show.
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