There is always one more bug to fix.

Computer programming has always been a self-taught, maverick occupation.

Genetics is where we come from. It's deeply natural to want to know.

Programming is the art of algorithm design and the craft of debugging errant code.

Computing is kind of a mess. Your computer doesn't know where you are. It doesn't know what you're doing. It doesn't know what you know.

Computing is evolving beyond phones, and people are using it in context across many scenarios, be it in their television, be it in their car, be it something they wear on their wrist or even something much more immersive.

What I was proud of was that I used very few parts to build a computer that could actually speak words on a screen and type words on a keyboard and run a programming language that could play games. And I did all this myself.

If I designed a computer with 200 chips, I tried to design it with 150. And then I would try to design it with 100. I just tried to find every trick I could in life to design things real tiny.

At our computer club, we talked about it being a revolution. Computers were going to belong to everyone, and give us power, and free us from the people who owned computers and all that stuff.

When we first started with Apple computers, it was my dream that everyone would learn to program, and that was how they'd use their computer.

Bill Gates did predict that computers for people made sense because he wrote a basic.

College just didn't even have computers for an under-curriculum when I started college.

Our first computers were born not out of greed or ego, but in the revolutionary spirit of helping common people rise above the most powerful institutions.

Never trust a computer you can't throw out a window

There is something sexy about a computer nerd.

"Computers allow us to squeeze the most out of everything, whether it's Google looking up things, so I guess that tends to make us a little lazy about reading books and doing things the hard way to understand how those things work."

"I want to reach a new generation. That's why I am Twittering now. I have a BlackBerry, an iPhone and a Mac."