Most people treat the office manual the way they treat a software manual. They never look at it.
My first job after college was at Magic Quest an educational software startup company where I was responsible for writing the content. I found that job somewhat accidentally but after working there a few weeks and loving my job I decided to pursue a career in technology.
Our technology is very scalable. Our software can accommodate enormous numbers of clients. It's a marvelous opportunity. We'll keep developing products.
In software systems it is often the early bird that makes the worm.
Defect-free software does not exist.
People who are really serious about software should make their own hardware.
There's not a long track record of people leaving professional sports to become a software developer.
Today's leading real-world retailer Wal-Mart uses software to power its logistics and distribution capabilities which it has used to crush its competition.
I want people to use Perl. I want to be a positive ingredient of the world and make my American history. So whatever it takes to give away my software and get it used that's great.
More and more major businesses and industries are being run on software and delivered as online services - from movies to agriculture to national defense.
Our democracy our constitutional framework is really a kind of software for harnessing the creativity and political imagination for all of our people. The American democratic system was an early political version of Napster.
I'm sorry that we have to have a Washington presence. We thrived during our first 16 years without any of this. I never made a political visit to Washington and we had no people here. It wasn't on our radar screen. We were just making great software.
In the free/libre software movement we develop software that respects users' freedom so we and you can escape from software that doesn't.
Free software is software that respects your freedom and the social solidarity of your community. So it's free as in freedom.
What you have in most education software is that they're catering to the decision-maker who makes the budget allocations and that decision-maker has a lot of check boxes. Does it do this? Check. Does it do that? Check. They could care less about the end user experience.
Health care and education in my view are next up for fundamental software-based transformation.
The basic problem is that web 2.0 tools are not supportive of democracy by design. They are tools designed to gather spy-agency-like data in a seductive way first and foremost but as a side effect they tend to provide software support for mob-like phenomena.