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Quotes About Telecommunication

THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY PICTURES ARE FLASHED BY WIRE AND RADIO SYNCHRONIZING WITH SPEAKER'S VOICE COMMERCIAL USE IN DOUBT BUT AT&T HEAD SEES A NEW STEP IN CONQUEST OF NATURE AFTER YEARS OF RESEARCH
~ Bill Bryson
We need to invest in telecommunication infrastructure with redundancies to combat denial of service attacks.
~ Brianna Wu
Skype actually does get a fair bit of revenue.
~ Bill Gates
Skype is for any individual who has a broadband Internet connection.
~ Niklas Zennstrom
Algún día, los científicos podrían construir una «internet de la mente», o brain-net, en la que los pensamientos y las emociones se enviarían electrónicamente de un lugar a otro del mundo
~ Michio Kaku
The meaning of yoga is connection of mind, body and spirit. If you have a bad telecommunication system, your body gets sick. Yoga helps fix that.
~ Bikram Choudhury
It is said that the earliest spark for the telephone came when Alexander Bell was still in his teens. He noticed how, if he sang a certain note near an open piano, the string of that note would vibrate, as if singing back to him. He sang an A; the A string shook. The idea of connecting voices through a wire was born. But it was not a new idea. We call out; we are answered. It has been that way from the beginning of belief, and it continues to this very moment
~ Mitch Albom
Haber Limmar Ponyets'in al?c?s?na eriÅŸtiÄŸi s?rada genç adam?n vücudu sabun köpüÄŸü içindeydi. Bu da insan? tele ayg?tlarla tam banyodayken arad?klar?yla ilgili kliÅŸeleÅŸmiÅŸ sözün Galaksinin Çevresinde, karanl?k ve soÄŸuk uzayda bile geçerli olduÄŸunu kan?tl?yordu.
~ Isaac Asimov
It is very clear that voice communications is moving on to the Internet. In the end, the price that anyone can provide for voice transmission on the Net will trend toward zero.
~ Meg Whitman
If you look at the major industries of the future, IT and mobile are way up there.
~ Romesh Wadhwani
There are smiles that actually travel along telephone wires, although no engineer at Bell Laboratories could explain how it works.
~ Tom Robbins
Chappe also had all sorts of ambitious plans for his invention; he hadn't intended its use to be so predominantly military in nature, and wanted to promote its employment in business.
~ Tom Standage
Looking back, I think the computer age did not really start until this moment, when computers merged with the telephone. Stand-alone computers were inadequate. All the enduring consequences of computation did not start until the early 1980s, that moment when computers married phones and melded into a robust hybrid. In
~ Kevin Kelly
The day will come when the man at the telephone will be able to see the distant person to whom he is speaking.
~ Alexander Graham Bell
Clarke remembered having his first experience with global communication when he worked at the Bishops Lydeard Post Office in his teens. "I was night operator for quite a long time at Bishops Lydeard, and one night there was a call from New York—very rare in those days. The call came by radio, of course; it was long before there was any telephonic cable. The operator in Taunton must have detected me listening in, and told me to unplug. I was probably weakening the signal.
~ Neil McAleer
a telephone subscriber here may call up and talk to any other subscriber on the Globe. An inexpensive receiver, not bigger than a watch, will enable him to listen anywhere, on land or sea, to a speech delivered or music played in some other place, however distant.
~ Nikola Tesla
It will only be necessary to carry an inexpensive instrument not bigger than a watch, which will enable its bearer to hear anywhere on sea or land for distances of thousands of miles. One may listen or transmit speech or song to the uttermost parts of the world. In the same way, any kind of picture, drawing, or print can be transferred from one place to another. It will be possible to operate millions of such instruments from a single station.
~ Nikola Tesla
For what need was there to go anywhere? It all was here. By simply twirling a dial one could talk face to face with anyone wished, could go, by sense, if not in body, anywhere one wished. Could attend the theater or hear a concert or browse in a library halfway around the world. Could transact any business one might need to transact without rising from one's chair. Webster
~ Clifford D. Simak
So by 1880, four years after Bell conveyed the words "Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you," and three years after the first pair of telephones rented for twenty dollars, more than sixty thousand telephones were in use in the United States.
~ James Gleick
What we are doing is taking advantage of the broadband Internet to provide basically unlimited free calls to anyone at a higher voice quality than they can with the phone lines.
~ Niklas Zennstrom
Olvidé mencionar que soy sensible no sólo a la melancolía y a la jaqueca, sino que poseo, además, otro don casi místico: puedo percibir olores por teléfono (Bóll, Heinrich. Opiniones de un payaso, trad. Lucas Casas. México: Seix Barral, 2005 p. 14).
~ Heinrich Boll
In this experiment, made on the 9th of October, 1876, actual conversation, backwards and forwards, upon the same line, and by the same instruments reciprocally used, was successfully carried on for the first time upon a real line of miles in length.
~ Alexander Graham Bell
Some people are using landline connections and dial-up modems to call ISPs in other countries and get onto the Internet. Still others are using satellite connections.
~ Daniel Lyons
Mr. Watson—Come here" joined "What hath God wrought" in immortality
~ Tom Wheeler