My future depends mostly upon myself.
Robots. . . I think that is a hot topic.
After two weeks of working on a project, you know whether it will work or not.
I started on an Apple II, which I had bought at the very end of 1978 for half of my annual income. I made $4,500 a year, and I spent half of it on the computer.
You will be able to program a robot to follow a track on the ground and manipulate a hand. You can also write little programs that will give the robots goals.
I can do whatever I want. They will tell me if what I am doing is stupid or a total waste of time. I may tell them that they are wrong, and we will come to an agreement.
Video games are engineered now, but the step I am trying to take, no one can engineer.
The distinctive mark of the Christian, today more than ever, must be love for the poor, the weak, the suffering.
All of my problems are rather complicated - I need an entire novel to deal with them, not a short story or a movie. It's like a personal therapy.
Are science and religion compatible? It's like, are science and plumbing compatible? They're just two different things.
Such is the nature and make-up of the French that they are only good at the start. Then they are worse than devils, but, given time, they're less than women.