I'm creating the kind of games that I like right now. I'm not being held back by technology.
We're competing with everything: the beach the mall bookstores. Libraries are in a transition right now caught between two forces the old ways and technology. Libraries are under a lot of pressure to provide both.
While there have been terrific advances in the state of technology around heuristics behavior blocking and things like that technology is only a part of the approach to solving the problem with the more important aspect involving putting the right process in place.
With this CD technology you can just remix a record right there on the spot.
Growing up I wish that I'd had the supplies and laptops and all the new technology that's out right now.
Ajax isn't a technology. It's really several technologies each flourishing in its own right coming together in powerful new ways.
We may have to force people to get together in terms of picking a particular type of technology and starting to build to that technology as opposed to everybody exercising their right to buy their own system you know at will.
The Spy Act strikes a right balance between preserving legitimate and benign uses of this technology while still at the same time protecting unwitting consumers from the harm caused when it is misused and of course designed for nefarious purposes.
Whereas with us - what you hear is what's happening right then and there on the stage - so we don't need no stinking technology.
The reality is that what you find out is that your head is the medicine. If your head is not in the right place and you don't think positively all the medicine technology in the world is not going to work.