The animated bug has bitten pop culture. It makes me feel happy and free. When you don't act seriously, you can make up your own rules.
The idea that feeling confident and feeling misunderstood are mutually exclusive really bugs me.
I find that writing unit tests actually increases my programming speed
Anyone can squash a bug but all professors of this world couldn't build one.
About 90 percent of the downtime comes from, at most, 10 percent of the defects.
There is a decivilizing bug somewhere at work; unconsciously persons of stern worth, by not resenting and resisting the small indignities of the times, are preparing themselves for the eventual acceptance of what they themselves know they don't want.
There has never been an unexpectedly short debugging period in the history of computers.
Second law: The complexity barrier. Software complexity (and therefore that of bugs) grows to the limits of our ability to manage that complexity.
Richard doesn't really like me to kill bugs, but sometimes I can't help it.
Once the travel bug bites, there is no known antidote.
Fame is an odd thing. It bugs you a little bit, but it's really not bad.
Up to a point, it is better to just let the snags [bugs] be there than to spend such time in design that there are none.
It bugs me that people think my songs are personal because it means I have to explain myself all the time.
A design remedy that prevents bugs is always preferable to a test method that discovers them.
It's amazing to me that we let humans drive cars. . . It's a bug that cars were invented before computers.
I played many sports, but when that golf bug hit me, it was permanent.
Compared to the bugs and the spiders and flies, I am an apeman.
I always played hockey, I was always a hockey fan, but I was never bitten by the hockey bug. . . I never looked into playing it professionally.
If you were to draw Bugs, the easiest way is to learn how to draw a carrot and then hook a rabbit onto it
It's hard to describe to people how terrible it was when you could only watch cartoons at a certain time in your life. But no, I would watch all of them - the Warner Bros. cartoons and the Bugs Bunnys and then the Tex Avery stuff. Looking back on it, they were so incredibly subversive for their time. You'd think, "Oh, they're just making jokes and this or that. " But when you watch them as an adult, you think, "Oh no, they were talking about some pretty deep stuff. "