Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Wireless. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Wireless Quotes And Sayings by 89 Authors including Antonio Perez,Larry Page,Alice Gray,Denis Waitley,Douglas Coupland for you to enjoy and share.
The wireless segment is approximately 50 percent of our business ... we believe this is an industry-wide phenomenon and that we are, in fact, maintaining if not gaining market share.
As devices multiply and usage changes (many users coming online today may never use a desktop machine), it becomes more and more important to ensure that people can access all of their stuff anywhere.
you realize how good your network is when you try and use it for something
If you're not networking, you're not networking.
Data transmission is no longer something scary you don't want in your backyard. Now you want it directly in front of your house.
Over the next ten years, everything that has a cord is going to have data in it.
If you were away from home, you had to use a phone attached by a wire to the wall. It was terrible.
Installing massive amounts of wireless devices into every city may eventually be proven to be a global weather modification system.
You're saying you would sit in my pub and talk into a wireless, and they would hear it in America?
The coming of the wireless era will make war impossible, because it will make war ridiculous.
There is an underlying, fundamental reliance on the Internet, which continues to grow in the number of users, country penetration and both fixed and wireless broadband access.
There is a revolution happening, and within two years I think that Wi-Fi and Netflix will be built into all the televisions.
There's a way to do networking that isn't overly brown-nosing.
From a security perspective, if you're connected, you're screwed.
We think of them as mobile phones, but the personal computer, mobile phone and the Internet are merging into some new medium like the personal computer in the 1980s or the Internet in the 1990s.
Wired people should know something about wires.
In the next 10 years, I expect at least five billion people worldwide to own smartphones, giving every individual with such a phone instant access to the full power of the Internet, every moment of every day.
All of a sudden the market is all about algos and routers.
If you have zero access to the Internet, that is an offline device.
Everywhere in a day there is light. Look around. Everywhere. Look at your smart phone. It has a flashlight, an LED flashlight. These are potential sources for high-speed data transmission.
Genuinely ubiquitous computing spreads like warm Vaseline.
Ambient Devices is what I call part of the Third Wave of Internet devices.
Within a few years a simple and inexpensive device, readily carried about, will enable one to receive on land or sea the principal news, to hear a speech, a lecture, a song or play of a musical instrument, conveyed from any other region of the globe.
On vacation, I totally unplug. I don't bring a laptop with me.
Even before I helped to co-found Microsoft, I saw a connected future ... I called that future The Wired World.
We need to substitute for the book a device that will make it easy to transmit information without transporting material.
As for yours truly, I've been sitting with my laptop atop a pillow on my lap to keep those wireless hotspot waveparticles from reaching my genitals and frying my sperm, searching up - with my employer's technology - myself, and Rach.
I need to travel, of course, with my laptop, so I can do my business on the road.
Mobile is the future and there's no such thing as communication overload
We would never get away from it ... It's bad enough as it is, but with the wireless telephone one could be called up at the opera, in church, in our beds. Where could one be free from interruption?
Our vision is for pervasive computing.
We're made up of energy, so who's to say you can't transmit through electrical means? If you could transmit yourself wirelessly, then it's Armageddon pretty much.
As people continue to do more and buy more over the Internet, continue to meet people over the Internet, connection speeds are going to get faster, and the Internet is just going to become an even more integral part of people's lives.
Once we become tethered to the network, we really don't need to keep computers busy. THEY KEEP US BUSY.
We want to bridge the digital gap to provide broadband access to 100 per cent of our educational institutions and to make it widely available to all people.
The next Internet could be in the making somewhere in someone's lab.
I love my little Mac G4 computer and we just had Internet installed on the bus ... we all have little Macs actually, there's four of us on the bus, and we all just sit there and surf the Internet!
What makes a great standalone piece of hardware is not the same thing as what makes a great networking device. One can work as an essentially closed system. The other is absolutely dependent on its openness.
People want to talk to other people - not a house, or an office, or a car. Given a choice, people will demand the freedom to communicate wherever they are, unfettered by the infamous copper wire. It is that freedom we sought to vividly demonstrate in 1973,
There are people out there so heavily specialized in wearable technology that they call shirts with networked devices built into them "wearable shirts." They're so deep into their own silo of futurism that they've forgotten how shirts work.
When wireless is fully applied the earth will be converted into a huge brain, capable of response in every one of its parts.
The most important thing for people to understand is that the basic rule that people have a right to send information over the Internet - even when they are using a wireless device - is part of the framework.
In the last 10 years, children have been locked inside their rooms, glued to their PCs ... But now with mobile technology, we can actually take our children outside into the natural world with their technology.
Here is the instruction: Only connect. Wherever you are, right now, pay attention. Forever.
Personally, I just got one of these Vonage IP phones. It's actually pretty cool. It comes with one of these Cisco ATA routers where you just plug an analog handset in.
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.
This wired generation is kind of cool.
Fortunately we have a product for people who aren't able to get some form of connectivity, it's called Xbox 360.
I want the entire smartphone, the entire Internet, on my wrist.
We have three post-PC devices: the iPod, the iPhone, and the iPad, the revolutionary device that defined a whole new categoryit's outstripping the wildest of predictions.
Can you explain what Internet is?
Mobile phones ... they're not for communicating, they're for broadcasting. Broadcasting The Show Of Me.
The Internet is a testament to a connected system that works - it's a global network where any computer can reach another, and easily transfer information across.
Our ever-present mobile devices provide the immediate and convenient information necessary to make sharing things truly irresistible.
The Internet of Things tell us that a lot of computer-enabled appliances and devices are going to become part of this system, too: appliances that you use around the house, that you use in your office, that you carry around with yourself or in the car. That's the Internet of Things that's coming.
Radio is immediate.
Everyone's connected but no one is connecting.
I get really excited imagining what we can do in the future with broadband.
Mobile is important, and coming faster than most people in this room realize.
I'm technologically challenged, so I finally hooked up Bluetooth in my truck so I can talk going down the road.
What we did is important because we proved that virtually all of the wireless networks used by companies and hospitals are completely open and offer no protection for the data on them.
Everywhere we look, technology has changed our daily lives - from the way we pay our bills, to the way we buy plane tickets or keep in touch with friends and family.
Dryware, wetware, hardware, software, blackware, darkware, nightware, nightmare . . . The modem sits inviting beside the phone, red eyes. I let it rest - you can't trust anybody these days.
Phoneless Cord in his stocking, ostentatiously packaged,
Indeed, in a world of the BlackBerry, remote access and Wi-Fi hotspots on every street corner, it feels particularly outdated that much of our working culture is still dominated by the need to be at our desk for long hours of the day.
As we grow up in more technology-enriched environments filled with laptops and smart phones, technology is not just becoming a part of our daily lives - it's becoming a part of each and every one of us.
I used to tell jokes about Internet-enabled lightbulbs. I can't tell jokes about it anymore - there already is an Internet-connected lightbulb.
Originating in large scale electronic warfare and anti-jamming technologies for the battlefield devised by two Russian immigrants, these now one-chip systems can fit in a handset and enable intercommunication among the towers of Babel in urban America.
We feel there is already widespread broadband available today.
It will allow us to control all the communication needs of a household with one device.
The Internet is part of this ongoing, species-long project we've been working on since we climbed down out of the trees in the savanna. We've been working on it without really knowing it.
Kids are plugged into some sort of electronic medium 44 hours per week.
I routinely use my blue sky "Device" and it works very well for me.
Technologically, the Internet works thanks to loose but trusted connections among its many constituent parts, with easy entry and exit for new ISPs or new forms of expanding access.
How many times have you been watching an episode of 'South Park' and thought, 'I'd like to be able to watch this on my television while hooked into my mobile device, which is being controlled by my tablet device which is hooked into my oven, all while sitting in the refrigerator?'
At the moment, most customers do not wish to pay the extra money for connection to the Internet, and for some customers, connection procedures to the Internet are still not easy.
Everything is so tech now; everyone is so connected that way.
When I'm playing with circular saws, I'm offline (though often listening to podcasts) and when I sit in the cabin to read or write, it's wonderful to be offline for a few hours at a time.
The Internet works thanks to loose but trusted connections among its many constituent parts, with easy entry and exit for new Internet service providers or new forms of expanding access.
I am full of admiration for the technologists who have developed all sorts of gadgets for the purpose of improving communications. However, I believe that all these fascinating machines are complementary to, and not substitutes for, books and the printed word.
Digital networks are increasing the fluidity of all media. The old choice between one-way public media (like books and movies) and two-way private media (like the phone) has now expanded to include a third option: two-way media that operates on a scale from private to public.
This is going to become a battle for access to your home and office plus mobility. It's about who can provide the biggest and least expensive and fastest pipe to your home and office and offer you a mobility feature.
Integral to the orb is our low cost long-range wireless radio data system and a protocol that allows us to send this data over 90% of the US population every 15 minutes throughout the day.
Information and communication technologies have changed the way of life completely. Nowadays, many people reach for their smart phones and/or turn their computers on as soon as they wake up. They look at the news on social networks and check e-mails, before they get dressed or have breakfast.
Digital communication is such a problem sometimes.
You should really think about buying another new tractor. I hear the current models have air conditioning and Wi-Fi."
"What the fuck do we need Wi-Fi for out in the field?"
"Don't know. Cows might be into the beefcake of the month sites. You never know about them heifers
Connectivity is productivity - whether it's in a modern office or an underdeveloped village.
Mycelium is Earth's natural Internet.
in 2001, one Norwegian enthusiast even implemented Internet Protocol with a set of carrier pigeons. (Observers reported a disappointing 56 percent packet loss rate: rephrased in English, five out of the nine pigeons appeared to have wandered off, or have been eaten.)
Inexpensive phones and pay-as-you go services are already spreading mobile phone technology to many parts of that world that never had a wired infrastructure.
the day is all about getting connected.
We carry around computers in our pockets. Many people barely use them as phones. We use them as computers. If you think about the future, when you're traveling around, it's great to have a lightweight, small form factor.
Networking is rubbish; have friends instead.
The mobile phone acts as a cursor to connect the digital and physical.
I've got a radio that occasionally I listen to. It's portable. It's got an antenna. I've put a piece of aluminum foil on it that gives me a little bit better reception. And a refrigerator.
I go to dinner with my friends, and we're like, 'Let's put our phones on airplane mode so we can really enjoy each other's company.'
If I get a computer and I tune it to the Internet, it will pick up the Internet from the invisible realms that I can't see.
The funny thing for me is, I have never lived in a network world.
It's like stealing WiFi from the universe.
Having studied the toxic biological effects of wireless radio frequency (RF) radiation, I find it amazing that women will willfully strap on two radio frequency antennas to their breasts in the form of an underwired bra. The wireless industry knows the underwired bra as a dipole antenna or doublet.