Digital Technology Quotes

On this page you will find all the quotes on the topic "Digital Technology". There are currently 51 quotes in our collection about Digital Technology. Discover the TOP 10 sayings about Digital Technology!
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  • Using film was so much easier than the digital technology of today. But digital is still at the beginning of what it can be and they'll be fixing all those problems. It's just too complicated - negatives, tinting, flashing - it's a whole new system that takes a lot of time. Of course, it's not as physical. Even the editing. You used to feed a piece of celluloid into an editor. [Digital] is not expensive and that is an advantage, but I must say that I don't love it.

    "Interview: Cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond". Interview with Laurence Lerman, www.discdish.com. January 11, 2016.
  • I have friends who have a CD mastering plant in Hollywood and they are very sceptical about European record labels' understanding of digital technology.

    Technology   Europe   Cds  
    Klassiknet Interview, www.culturekiosque.com.
  • I'm certainly not opposed to digital technology, whose graces I daily enjoy and rely on in so many ways. But I worry about our virtual blinders.

    "Are We Living in Sensory Overload or Sensory Poverty?". opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com. June 10, 2012.
  • Digital technology has eaten classic radio as we know it. Independent stations with disc jockeys who chose their own music have all gone; it's these huge parent companies that own a hundred stations and then decide what we should hear.

    Source: thequietus.com
  • There is a strong reciprocal relationship whereby our more ambitious design visions encourage the continuing development of the new digital technologies and fabrication techniques, and those new developments in turn inspire us to push the design envelope ever further.

    Source: www.designboom.com
  • No place in the US better exemplifies the ethos to engineer new digital technologies than Silicon Valley

  • The newest computer can merely compound, at speed, the oldest problem in the relations between human beings, and in the end the communicator will be confronted with the old problem, of what to say and how to say it.

    On receiving the "Family of Man" Award, 1964.
  • There is incredible potential for digital technology in and beyond the classroom, but it is vital to rethink how learning is organised if we are to reap the rewards.

  • The proliferation of outlets that digital technology has enabled has itself contributed to the changing nature of what we regard as 'news' and the way in which many citizens perceive politics.

    "Biography/Personal Quotes". www.imdb.com.
  • But, when we started our product portfolio, we focused the mixed signal requirements first for image processing devices and then in audio applications , targeting our technology into the growing use of digital technology in consumer markets.

  • Overregulation stifles creativity. It smothers innovation. It gives dinosaurs a veto over the future. It wastes the extraordinary opportunity for a democratic creativity that digital technology enables.

    Lawrence Lessig (2004). “Free Culture: The Nature and Future of Creativity”, p.151, Penguin
  • Technology... the knack of so arranging the world that we don't have to experience it.

    Max Frisch (1994). “Homo Faber”, p.186, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
  • What’s next for technology and design? A lot less thinking about technology for technology’s sake, and a lot more thinking about design. Art humanizes technology and makes it understandable. Design is needed to make sense of information overload. It is why art and design will rise in importance during this century as we try to make sense of all the possibilities that digital technology now affords.

    "Why Apple Leads the Way in Design" by John Maeda, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 27, 2010.
  • We have to wonder whether digital technology, rather than making it easier to communicate, is actually doing the opposite. We now sit alone at a keyboard, firing off zeros and ones into the ether. Offices are silent.

    "Why I decided to pull the plug on email" by Tom Hodgkinson, www.theguardian.com. March 6, 2007.
  • I'm not really satisfied with the technology today. Using film was so much easier than the digital technology of today. But digital is still at the beginning of what it can be and they'll be fixing all those problems.

    Source: www.discdish.com
  • All I ask is this: Do something. Try something. Speaking out, showing up, writing a letter, a check, a strongly worded e-mail. Pick a cause – there are few unworthy ones. And nudge yourself past the brink of tacit support to action. Once a month, once a year, or just once...Even just learning enough about a subject so you can speak against an opponent eloquently makes you an unusual personage. Start with that. Any one of you would have cried out, would have intervened, had you been in that crowd in Bashiqa. Well thanks to digital technology, you’re all in it now.

  • The combination of the growth of these digital technologies, the ability of the government to conjure up these secret interpretations, plus a very unusual and novel court make for this ever-expanding surveillance state. We so treasure our freedoms; we will regret it if our generation doesn't use this unique time to reform the surveillance laws and make it clear that security and liberty are not mutually exclusive. We can do both.

    Source: www.motherjones.com
  • My hope is that digital technology will level things out more and that it will eventually eliminate favoritism. But technology cannot do it alone. The audience has to become more discriminating as well and not buy into every big tentpole movie because they have been brainwashed into thinking that's the movie to see.

    Source: piratetimes.net
  • Space has not changed but technology has, in many cases, improved dramatically. A good example is digital technology where today's cell phones are far more powerful than the computers on the Apollo Command Module and Lunar Module that we used to navigate to the moon and operate all the spacecraft control systems.

    Interview at "The New Space Race", August 2007.
  • As a digital technology writer, I have had more than one former student and colleague tell me about digital switchers they have serviced through which calls and data are diverted to government servers or the big data algorithms they've written to be used on our e-mails by intelligence agencies.

    "Edward Snowden is a hero". Article by Douglas Rushkoff, edition.cnn.com. June 11, 2013.
  • I don't think that digital technology will ever take away the humanity of storytelling, because storytelling is entirely, in and of itself, a wholly human concern.

  • Digital technologies are setting down the new grooves of how people live, how we do business, how we do everything--and they're doing it according to the expectations of foolish utopian scenarios. We want free online experiences so badly that we are happy to not be paid for information that comes from us now or ever. That sensibility also implies that the more dominant information becomes in our economy, the less most of us will be worth.

    Jaron Lanier (2014). “Who Owns the Future?”, p.16, Simon and Schuster
  • When digital technology started becoming the norm, you've got 50, 60, 70 years of recordings on tapes that are just deteriorating. Like, a two-inch reel of recording tape won't last forever. It dissolves. It will disappear.

    Technology   Years   Two  
    "Dave Grohl And Krist Novoselic Share Memories, Unreleased Tracks From 'In Utero'". Interview with Bob Boilen and Robin Hilton, www.npr.org. September 10, 2013.
  • You can fix things with digital technology and there's a temptation to fix everything or make it perfect and what you're losing there is the human performance that may not be perfect but there may be magic in it. You can make it perfect but music doesn't sound good perfect for some reason.

    Source: thequietus.com
  • Just because digital technology makes connecting possible doesn't mean you're actually reaching people.

  • I started playing with digital technology early on in my work. I made digital collages with costumed figures using early versions of Photoshop in the 90s. I was trying to use the newly available digital technologies to combine real people and places with new imagined possibilities.

    Source: badatsports.com
  • Digital technology has several features that can make it much easier for teachers to pay special attention to all their students.

  • Digital technology, you see, is not the villain here. It simply offers another dimension. I'm not sure if it's a farther remove from reality than analogue. I think if we can speak of reality, if reality and representation can be spoken of in the same sentence, if reality even exists any more, digital is simply another way of encoding that reality.

  • Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

    Letter to the editor, Science, 19 Jan. 1968.
  • Everyone seems to think that digital technology devoids the medium of content, but that is not true at all. If anything, it broadens the content.

    "Beyond Star Wars" by Kevin Kelly and Paula Parisi, www.wired.com. February 01, 1997.
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