I feel comfortable tweeting things that I would never feel comfortable saying in a real life conversation, or even in other places on the internet.
My point is, no one can stop the Internet. No one can stop that march. It doesn't mean that it's going to be smooth, though.
Today's clunky smart glasses will be replaced by smart contact lenses. We'll command them by voice, blinking, or even thinking, to interact visually in 3-D with the Internet.
The Internet is the greatest thing that ever happened to the entertainment industry.
I love my DSL, but I love my WiFi more. And I probably get on the Internet 40 percent to 50 percent more because of the combination of those technologies.
I get it that remakes are a drag to hear about. I'm on the Internet all the time. I know what they say. Like there's no original ideas in Hollywood.
Thing is: the internet's made of IP addresses, opinions, and assholes. It's what's there. That's the basic equipment.
Most of the press I end up doing now asks, "Make a playlist for us... What are your top ten current bands?" I'm like, "I don't even know one band!" It's kind of awful. I would love to get more new music. I'm just not that amazing with the Internet and things.
We no longer have roots, we have aerials.
I just get my news from the Internet.
I'm easy to find on the Internet.
Both cinematic culture and the culture at large have changed profoundly. We're now in post-cinematic digital culture, and the internet has obviously usurped movies, which are no longer central to our lives, at least not as a collective spectator experience.
You could take the Internet enthusiasm that was happening in 1999 and 2000 here in the U.S., and in China it was three-to-five times more ebullient.
Internet TV is replacing linear TV.
I'm not good at going on the internet and trolling around and finding information.
The Internet is a bright spot for our struggling economy and functioning just fine without what amounts to a federal pat-down of the inner workings of the Internet.
I hate it when people quote me on the internet, claiming I said things that I never actually said.
Linking without permission is stealing. Period, end of story.
Video for the Internet has become a testing ground for mediums that actually have revenue.
The world is changing, and the Internet is about to become the next broadcast network.
The living Web unfolds in time, and as we see each daily revelation we experience its growth as a story.
Imitating paper isn't the goal; the goal is surpassing paper.
Today, only about 1% of the World Wide Web is written in Arabic.
I turned off my Google alerts in 2009 as I learnt that following yourself on the Internet very quickly becomes unhealthy.
Obviously this all gets tricky/complicated when your writing reveals so much of your private/intimate life, and the nature of writing on the Internet comes with a lot of focus on your "personal brand."