Iphone Quotes by Sue Tompkins, Stevie Wonder, Biz Stone, Tristan Perich, Phil Callaway, Jonathan Zittrain and many others.
Well, clearly Apple is a role model of the American innovation whereby it produced all these products – iPod, iPhone, iPad – that are really now dominating all the technology arena in the world.
The Mac defined personal technology, and the iPhone defines intimate technology as a convergence of communications, content and location.
Nobody can deny that Apple is fashionable, and most iPhone users buy the newest so they can be fashionable. To do this right, Apple needs a new phone every quarter.
First was the mouse. The second was the click wheel. And now, we’re going to bring multi-touch to the market. And each of these revolutionary interfaces has made possible a revolutionary product – the Mac, the iPod and now the iPhone.
You’ll get this kind of psychological relationship to the imagery of the music, but that idea is translated to iPhone apps. It’s translated to the small, you know, kind of icons on your computer. You name it.
I feel like a Mac store! I have a Canadian iPhone, an American iPhone and an iPad. I’m constantly downloading music to iTunes.
With Android I get to choose from many different products from many different phone manufacturers. With iOS, I get what Apple gives me. Which isn’t necessarily bad, but it’s not always the best fit for my personal or business communication needs.
Apple makes beautiful products. I own a Mac Pro, a Mac Book, a Mac Mini, an iPad, an iPhone, pretty much the entire collection.
New iPod. It looks like an iPhone but it can’t make phone calls. So its really just an iPhone.
What do we do if we pass a law that says this has to be done, and then China says, oh, well, OK, we’re going to pass that law too and we want access to every iPhone in China? Iran says the same thing, Russia says the same thing – you know, the bad guys go underground. They’ll shift to some other encrypted platform.
First of all, the American people are inundated with advertisement after advertisement of you buy, buy, buy. You’ve got to have the latest thing. The iPad 1 isn’t any good anymore, you’ve got to have the iPad 2. The iPhone 4, now you’ve got to have iPhone 4S. Now you’ve got to have the 5b, now you’ve got to have the 6c.
I would absolutely love to go back to the simplicity of the ‘80s, where there wasn’t texting, social media, iPhones, or smartphones. I love the fact that you would go home and check your messages. I’m not well suited to the world of modern technology.
People who type with their iPhones on loud are barbarians and probably killers.
When the Mac first came out, Newsweek asked me what I [thought] of it. I said: Well, it’s the first personal computer worth criticizing. So at the end of the presentation, Steve came up to me and said: Is the iPhone worth criticizing? And I said: Make the screen five inches by eight inches, and you’ll rule the world.
Beyond all our Blackberries and iPhones, we’re dangerously separated from our food and water supplies.
I don’t think it’s necessary to worry too much about being authentic. I think a picture taken on an iPhone and then filtered through something to make it look like it was taken on a Super 8 camera can be just as authentic as something taken on a Super 8 camera, if it’s capturing something real or beautiful.
When I see a kid in a movie theater texting, I think it’s a failure of the movie. It’s not a triumph of the Apple iPhone. It’s a failure of Warner Bros. and Sony, and all that, because they haven‘t kept their attention and challenged them. They’re smart little kids that are bored, and I wanted to challenge them.
The car was the iPhone of the 20th century. Kids these days don’t have to drive anymore. They just go there virtually.
I believe you should have a world where you’ve got to license something at a fair price. There are good things I see on Samsung phones that I wish were in my iPhone. I wish Apple would use them and could use them, and I don’t know if Samsung would stop us.
Apple has never allowed ad-blocking software on the iPhone or iPad. This is one among many reasons that I ditched both. Not because I hate ads all that passionately, but because it’s an example of the obsessive corporate control Apple maintains over its environment.
My iPhone stays on. All my friends and family know that I hate the phone, so no one calls me on it. I just use it to play Words With Friends and take pictures of cute shoes.
I love to personalize things. I love to make things my own. I like to name everything – from cars to iPhones to the socks I just lost.
From the first time I held an iPhone, the space has evolved quickly, and people have shifted from reading content on their desktops to smartphones and iPads, even long-form stuff.
I am impressed with the innovation in the wireless marketplace. The Blackberry, the iPhone, the Pre, and other smart devices are breakthrough technologies that have helped revolutionize the wireless space.
Everyone wants an iPhone, but it would be impossible to design an iPhone in China because it’s not a product; it’s an understanding of human nature.
The Internet Was Designed For The PC. The Internet Is Not Designed For The iPhone
I’ve gotten so far past the Android and iPhones that I’m back to a flip-phone. It’s funny, you can buy antique flip-phones online. A lot of us collect them. Clearly, they’re considered antiques.
When the iPhone was first announced, CEO Steve Jobs spewed enough BS to cover a football field full of babies 3 feet deep in bullshit, which sounds cool because he could have potentially murdered a football field full of babies, but he passed on this opportunity by introducing the phone instead.
Files on iTunes – and thus iPods – are incompatible with everything else. Applications on iPhones may only be sold and uploaded through the iPhone store – giving Apple control over everything people put on to the devices they thought they owned.
But iPods and iPhones are two things we don’t get for our kids.
I think healthy competition is good for business, and really at the end best for end-users. Just think about what Android would have been if it was not for iPhone – a better blackberry?
Everyone with an iPhone is a journalist in their own way now, especially because we live in a tabloid culture.
Try putting your iPhones down every once in a while and look at people’s faces.
Try typing a web key on a touchscreen on an Apple iPhone, that’s a real challenge. You cannot see what you type.
I don’t really see a huge divide between filmmaking and television. In the end, a lot of people are going to be watching this stuff on their laptops and their iPhones anyway. So, it doesn’t really matter where it comes from, as long as the stories get told.
The two things I use the most are the MacBook Air and my iPhone. Those are my two most-used gadgets that are dented, scratched and smashed.
The iPhone is not and never was a phone. It is a pocket-sized computer that obviates the phone. The iPhone is to cell phones what the Mac was to typewriters.
I use technology for communication, but I don’t have a Blackberry or an iPhone. I use an outdated cell phone, but I’m fine with it.
What we want to do is make a leapfrog product that is way smarter than any mobile device has ever been, and super-easy to use. This is what iPhone is. OK? So, we’re going to reinvent the phone.
To the people who’ve got iPhones: you just bought one, you didn’t invent it!