Top 1200 Computer Viruses Quotes & Sayings - Page 19

Explore popular Computer Viruses quotes.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
I've always been thinking in three dimensions, ever since I started working with computer animation in the early '80s.
I set up my own trading center in my Cabot dorm room... with my computer, my fax machine, and my telephone.
You've got to think, when we started our band, none of us had a computer until we were 21. — © Benji Madden
You've got to think, when we started our band, none of us had a computer until we were 21.
Plants with leaves no more efficient than today's solar cells could out-compete real plants, crowding the biosphere with an inedible foliage. Tough omnivorous bacteria could out-compete real bacteria: They could spread like blowing pollen, replicate swiftly, and reduce the biosphere to dust in a matter of days. Dangerous replicators could easily be too tough, small, and rapidly spreading to stop - at least if we make no preparation. We have trouble enough controlling viruses and fruit flies.
What joy and adventure the youngsters of today are missing as they sit indoors mucking about with computer games and videos!
I don't have too many gadgets in the house. I do like playing computer games every now and again, though.
I fear - as far as I can tell - that most undergraduate degrees in computer science these days are basically Java vocational training.
Nine out of every 10 large corporations and government agencies have been attacked by computer intruders.
It takes people being alone in front of the computer at three in the morning to write opinions about movies, apparently.
It's amazing how many people even today use a computer to do something you can do with a pencil and paper in less time.
Part of doing Linux was that I had to communicate a lot more instead of just being a geek in front of a computer.
All of the details that most of us memorize in medical school - you don't have to learn those things. They're going to be in your computer.
As a writer, you sit around a computer all day, and it's too easy to open another tab and keep Rotten Tomatoes there. — © Evan Daugherty
As a writer, you sit around a computer all day, and it's too easy to open another tab and keep Rotten Tomatoes there.
No one even has to leave their computer to find cool and interesting people to hang out with. Everyone is online in some form.
For example, computer defends well, but for humans its is harder to defend than attack, particularly with the modern time control.
Everyone's computer, mobile phone or music-listening device should have a folder in my name with 100 songs.
This week Apple stores are holding free computer programming classes for children. Or as that's called in China, a job fair.
Social capital may turn out to be a prerequisite for, rather than a consequence of, effective computer-mediated communication.
I love computer programmers. They have a very beautiful definition of complexity as 'the capacity to transmit the maximum information with the minimum data'.
I have always got my computer or phone nearby so that I can find out extra details about a certain subject.
I'll cheerfully confess to spending a lot of time playing completely disgusting computer games that have no redeeming social value.
I need to be able to work for 20 or 30 hours in one go in complete darkness, alone with just the computer glow.
In 1975 I met Alison Brown and in 1982 we were married. She works for Cornell Computer Services.
You reach into cyberspace and you grab some cyber stuff, build it up, and the computer will give you a 360 of it.
They're not predicting global warming based on what's happened in the past; they're basing it on what their computer predictions say, and nothing more.
Although I played a lot of computer games in my 20s, now I have children of my own, I hate them with a passion.
My iPhone has 2 million times the storage of the 1969 Apollo 11 computer. They went to the moon. I throw birds at pig houses
I am a granddaughter of immigrants, put myself through college as a waitress, and I started my career as a computer programmer.
I spent most of my childhood welded to my Atari 2600, until I got my first computer, a TRS-80.
I studied computer science and graphic design, yeah, so music was self-taught and a backburner thing, an obsessive hobby.
At Harvard, I worked for some time as a researcher in a lab for computer graphics and spatial analysis, which is one of the birthplaces for what we do.
Until Systers came into existence, the notion of a global 'community of women in computer science' did not exist.
People talk about curing autism. But if you got rid of all those traits, who's going to make the next computer?
An actor finds things in the moment with a director and other actors that you don't have time to hand-draw or animate with a computer.
Fashion is very complicated for machines to learn - something that is intuitive for a human is usually the hardest thing to teach a computer.
Women are both talented and innovative thinkers and tend to use computer science as a tool to solve larger problems.
Apple has struck a cultural nerve, especially with Generation X and Gen Y, while Windows and PC are viewed in essence as 'My parents' computer'.
There are so many things calling you toward that computer or TV. You forget, we're a family. We're all supposed to spend time together and talk. — © John Rocco
There are so many things calling you toward that computer or TV. You forget, we're a family. We're all supposed to spend time together and talk.
There is a sort of convergence starting to happen between the computer and musical instruments, but it's still quite a long way off.
The cool kids have co-opted all the neat stuff ? computers, gadgets, video games. Theres no such thing as a computer geek anymore.
I have one computer that my wife gave me. All I know how to do, and I do it every day, is play Spider Solitaire. And I don't have a cell phone.
Outcasts may grow up to be novelists and filmmakers and computer tycoons, but they will never be the athletic ruling class.
Writing is a lot like making soup. My subconscious cooks the idea, but I have to sit down at the computer to pour it out.
I'm a very simple man. You've got to have, like, a computer nowadays to turn the TV on and off... and the nightmare continues.
Never ask what sort of computer a guy drives. If he's a Mac user, he'll tell you. If not, why embarrass him?
Computer Science is the only discipline in which we view adding a new wing to a building as being maintenance.
Death and disaster are at our shoulders every second of our lives, trying to get at us. Missing, a lot of the time. A lot of miles on the motorway without a front wheel blow-out. A lot of viruses that slither through our bodies without snagging. A lot of pianos that fall a minute after we've passed. Or a month, it makes no difference. So unless we're going to get down on our knees and give thanks every time disaster misses, it makes no sense to moan when it strikes.
There was a computer in our garage when I was growing up, and I'd go out there in winter and wrap myself in a blanket and write a story. — © Eleanor Catton
There was a computer in our garage when I was growing up, and I'd go out there in winter and wrap myself in a blanket and write a story.
I don't need a hard disk in my computer if I can get to the server faster... carrying around these non-connected computers is byzantine by comparison.
I don't know what country's willing to export - for free - the computer scientists, engineers, doctors. It's hard to me to understand.
Children want the challenge of difficult tasks - just look how much better they are than their parents on a computer.
I became convinced that the whole essence of the computer revolution is interactivity. That was very early in my career. At the time I did that it was heresy.
This fascination with computer models is something I understand very well. Richard Feynmann called it a disease. I fear he is right.
Ethereum has taken what was a four-function calculator of a programming language in Bitcoin and turned it into a full-fledged computer.
Anything is possible when tackling a blank sheet with ink. It's less distracting because I'm away from my computer and all of its convenient diversions.
Everyone is so addicted to their damn phone. It's sad to see the filmmaker's work diminished down to a computer screen.
As I look back on my career, I had a goal, which was to build the first feature computer-animated film.
I saw myself as an electronic joy rider. I was like James Bond behind the computer. I was just having a blast.
I can't even imagine writing nonfiction by hand. I think if I didn't have a computer, I just couldn't do it. Maybe it's a brain-section issue.
If you wanted to build the most powerful computer you could, you can't do better than including everything in the universe that's potentially available.
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