Folks have to pin me down because, for one thing, I don't have a laptop. I don't have an iPhone, and I refuse to carry them because they're immensely hackable.
The good thing about being a writer is that you don't need anything except for a laptop. You can really do your own work and if you're not manically compelled to write all the time before you do it professionally, it's probably not a business for you anyway.
Laptop computers dramatically increased the time people spend doing work. (The internet dramatically decreased it, so we're even).
Because of the cumbersome nature of filmmaking, it's only recently that it has become available to the masses, with digital equipment and laptop computers. You can now actually make a pretty serviceable movie for very little money by yourself.
The modern listening experience is one of solitude, where someone just listens to music on their laptop.
My studio is a laptop. Everybody I work with is the same. We make computer music, we're the laptop generation.
YouTube is a new experience for me-someone threw a laptop in front of me and showed me Nic Cage going mad, which has got to be the funniest thing on YouTube. He's so courageous.
We writers dream of a future where actors are mostly computer generated and their performances can be adjusted, by us, on a laptop, alone.
I need to travel, of course, with my laptop, so I can do my business on the road.
I decided to create a really good laptop recording situation and to learn how to write that way, rather than have the perfect stuff around.
I'm a great fan of taking my laptop out and about.
Everything will be okay. I have a sticker on my laptop that says that.
No one shuts their laptop after looking at pornography and says, 'What a productive time I just spent connecting with the world!'
The reason I'm an I.B.M.-type guy today is that I really needed a laptop back in 1986, and I just couldn't wait for the Powerbook.
I have used Lenovo since I wrote my first novel. My old laptop broke, so I bought a new one, but still a Lenovo. It is one of my most essential devices.
I'm not good at selling laptops. I'm good at selling ideas.
My goal is not selling laptops. OLPC is not in the laptop business. It's in the education business.
I started accessible GPS research in 1994 and the first version became available on a laptop in 2000.
I don't go anywhere without my iPod, laptop and at least one book.
I write on a computer, on a laptop or whatever.
I have switched on this modern laptop machine. And I have told myself that I must resist the temptation to start playing solitaire upon it.
I do it live on tape with a band. It's not like I'm doing electronic music with a laptop.
I don't think I'm unusual in preferring my laptop to be thin and light.
The correct form factor for a laptop is obviously 12" and 2 lbs, and I don't understand why everybody gets that wrong.
Im going to get myself one of those, um, movable computers - what do you call them... ? Laptops! I am bad. I still call my radio a wireless.