The younger generation is surrounded by the Internet, apps, and video games. But somehow, my books make them read.
As the Internet of things advances, the very notion of a clear dividing line between reality and virtual reality becomes blurred, sometimes in creative ways.
What the Internet's value is that you have access to information but you also have access to every lunatic that's out there that wants to throw up a blog.
In whose interest is it to hype up the collapse of the Internet from a DDoS attack? Why, the people who provide cyber security services, of course.
I buy a lot of books I've found via the Internet, whose existences I'd otherwise never have known about.
Everything is relative. Is the Internet fast? Not for most people. Is it always on? Yes, for cable modem and DSL users but that represents a tiny percentage of users.
Netiquette: The social code of network communication. Internet code of conduct based on the Golden Rule. Ethical philosophy of common rules.
It is proper netiquette to invite new friends in real life to connect with you on the internet. NetworkEtiquette.net
Netiquette brings the World together through the Internet for the Information Age. It's all data. NetworkEtiquette.net
Stand-up comedy is tough right now. Anybody can come to a concert, tape you, and put you up on the Internet. You either fight it or embrace it.
The only way the Internet will continue to remain the thriving medium it has become today is to keep it under the control of the United States.
I don't appreciate, really, talking to journalists when there's a sense of wanting to kick up dust to sell more papers or get more hits on their Internet site.
It's so cheap to just release a movie. You can do it by yourself if you have to. Put in on the Internet if you have to.
If you look at the first commercial transactions on the Internet, few of the early companies necessarily survived intact, but the ideas they invented became the industry.
The interesting thing about the Internet is that it has created a kind of alternative circle of friends for people.
In 2012 there was a megafoolish, if well-funded, effort by a group called Americans Elect to raise an independent Cincinnatus to run for president via an Internet draft. It flopped, spectacularly.
I have one major problem with the internet: It's full of liars. There doesn't seem to be any way to answer to people lying about you.
The danger of the Internet is cocooning with the like-minded online - of sending an email or Twitter and confusing that with action - while the real corporate and military and government centers of power go right on.
Craigslist does serve as a platform where people help each other for the basics, and also, shows people that the Internet is good for mutual support. I do feel pretty good about that.
I love the idea of the amateur - that's what popular culture is all about. But what the Internet's doing is professionalizing everyone's amateuristic impulses.
I think up until that time a lot of focus on Internet coverage was either sort of the bits and bytes aspect of it, sort of the high-tech aspect of it, and the sociological aspect of it, which is how it was transforming culture.