Authors:

Different Quotes - Page 207

Trying and acheiving are two different things.

Trying and acheiving are two different things.

"Project Runway (Clothes Off Your Back)". TV Series, December 7, 2005.

In my view the tablet and the PC are different. You can do things with the tablet if you are not encumbered by the legacy of the PC.

"Tim Cook On Facebook, The iPad, And Just About Everything Else". Interview with Jay Yarow, www.businessinsider.com. May 29, 2012.

Since these early days, I have seen and have experienced many types of discrimination and all of them were rooted in the fear of people that were different than the majority.

"Apple doesn't need another charismatic leader. It needs Tim Cook" by Dominic Rushe, www.theguardian.com. September 6, 2014.

I'm lucky to have been able to represent different companies over my career.

Interview with Darren Rovell, www.cnbc.com. November 21, 2011.

It's not Utopian to believe that we can create a global registry of financial assets so we know who owns what in different countries.

"Inequality will worsen in America unless… Piketty’s Rx". Interview with Paul Solman, www.pbs.org. May 12, 2014.

With the same honest views, the most honest men often form different conclusions.

Thomas Jefferson, Brett F. Woods (2009). “Thomas Jefferson: Thoughts on War and Revolution”, p.153, Algora Publishing

People have recognized me sometimes but not much. I'm glad my life isn't too different. I don't want it to be.

"Thomas Horn's incredibly fast start to career" by Jessica Zack, www.sfgate.com. January 15, 2012.

Heresy is a word which, when it is used without passion, signifies a private opinion. So the different sects of the old philosophers, Academians, Peripatetics, Epicureans, Stoics, &c., were called heresies.

Thomas Hobbes (1840). “The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury: Dialogue between a philosopher and a student of the common laws in England. Behemoth: The history of the causes of the civil wars of England. The whole art of rhetoric. The art of rhetoric, plainly set forth. The art of sophistry”, p.174