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Quotes About Innovation

Miller University of California, Riverside, Professor and Chair, Media & Cultural Studies Christopher Newfield University of California, Santa Barbara, Professor, English Department, Innovation Working Group, Center for
~ Cathy N. Davidson
Self-learning has bloomed;
~ Cathy N. Davidson
condemn traditional institutions but, we fervently hope, to be among
~ Cathy N. Davidson
visionary behind the Digital Media and Learning Initiative. This project would not have been conceived, let alone
~ Cathy N. Davidson
Cathy N. Davidson
~ institutions
The Classroom and the World Wide Web
~ Cathy N. Davidson
Lacking confidence in your ability to change, it's much easier to blame the changed situation—typically, new technologies—and then dig in your heels, raising a bulwark against the new.
~ Cathy N. Davidson
schools-how we teach, where we teach, who we teach, who teaches, who administers, and who services-have changed mostly around the edges.
~ Cathy N. Davidson
The School of the Future: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The School of the Future in Philadelphia is unique in that it is the first urban high school to be built in a working partnership with
~ Cathy N. Davidson
Artistic othering has to do with innovation, invention, and change, upon which cultural health and diversity depend and thrive. Social othering has to do with power, exclusion, and privilege, the centralizing of a noun against which otherness is measured, meted out, marginalized. My focus is the practice of the former by people subjected to the latter.
~ Cathy Park Hong
He got rid of the punchline to prove that stand-up could be anything, which is what geniuses do: they blow up mothballed conventions in their chosen genre and show you how a song, or a poem, or a sculpture, can take any form.
~ Cathy Park Hong
The soul of innovation thrives on cross-cultural inspiration. If we are restricted to our lanes, culture will die.
~ Cathy Park Hong
A $100,000,000 venture capital fund was set up solely for products using a specific computer language.
~ Cay S. Horstmann
And being different? That turned out to be the best part of all. I found that with a little creativity, and a lot of dedication, any difference can be turned into something amazing. Our differences are our superpowers
~ Cece Bell
But the pods also held the things people had created—the finest examples of the artistry and the ingenuity of our own species. How could we be so creative and so destructive at the same time?
~ Geraldine Brooks
Yet all the projections confirm that SSPS plants built at a space manufacturing facility out of nonterrestrial materials should be able to undersell electricity produced by any alternative source here on Earth.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
It would be quite feasible to project materials from the Moon's surface down to Earth by means of electrically powered catapults or launching tracks," he wrote.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
we'll have weather control by 2015,
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
But we do not yet have a computer and a program for it that together can interpret speech correctly, without uncertainties, when it is spoken at a normal rate.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
At the present rate of technical development, electronic mail is probably no more than one or two decades away, so in the Tehaneys' world of 2081 it will have been taken for granted long since.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
Next my guide explained that we would travel to Erie on an underground high-speed vehicle called a "floater," which ran in vacuum through a tunnel, supporting itself on magnetic fields
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
All of the homes, shops, and office buildings in Waterford are linked by an underground package-transfer network that uses the "floater" technology. It takes approximately thirty seconds to send a package from any one place in Waterford to any other, as long as the package is within the dimensions of a typical large supermarket item
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
The construction of space colonies will follow a similar pattern, so that by the year 2010 or thereabouts there will be many space colonies in existence and many new ones being constructed each year.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
There have been several attempts at setting up electronic mail systems within the federal post office administration, but all have failed, not for technical reasons, but because the post office is resistant to change, as it is locked into a bureaucratic system in which patronage and civil-service job security are far more important than efficiency. Given that history, it seems to me more likely that electronic mail will come about through private rather than governmental action.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill