I don't really have any apps!

I don't use many apps. I use naps.

I think dating apps are keeping us apart.

I have a lot of game apps I need to delete.

At AOL, we thought the killer app was people

I think I have over 60 apps on my iPhone. I use six.

The user, not the ISP, should be the kingmaker of apps.

Cloud Foundry will not differentiate you, your apps will.

I'm at the stage in my life that real-estate apps turn me on.

I am prescribing a lot more apps than medications these days.

Apps have made it easier to meet people but harder to connect.

I like to discover new things and I'm always testing new apps.

I like to discover new things, and I'm always testing new apps.

I'm not enthusiastic about educational games or apps generally.

There's no more silicon in Silicon Valley. It's all iPhone apps.

Apps, email, and social are the three things Google does not control.

Right now, nearly all the apps on Facebook take a week to build. No more.

There needs to be an app that edits what I say versus what I want to say.

Just invest in apps. Just download apps and then pay yourself the dividend.

I live on my phone: I have a bunch of news and informational apps on there.

If you are into synthesis it’s a must have app. I’ve been jamming all night!

Apps have become a preferred way of accessing information on mobile devices.

I'm deleting all my editing apps I used to slim myself down and airbrush pics.

People used to want to be filmmakers and animators; now they want to make apps.

I'm on all the apps: Tinder, Grindr, Bumble, Scruff. I have no shame about that.

In the future we might not prescribe drugs all the time - we might prescribe apps.

On mobile, what are the core apps? It's basically messaging, mapping and review data.

I like to download as many apps as I can - especially the ones with games and gadgets.

The Shakespeare Pro App is simply terrific and filled with loads of wonderful information!

But I've become completely obsessed with taking photos on my iPhone. I have like 400 apps.

I'm rarely invited to start-up parties, but who cares about their trinkets and apps anyway?

The iPad's all about proprietary apps that are supposed to be amazing on the bigger screen.

Have confidence in your strengths, dear writer, or give it all up now and create apps instead.

Mostly I use the O2 as an X terminal, however, running my apps on Linux and displaying remotely.

A good browser, apps, good camera, and fast networking in your smartphone is just expected today.

I don't like it when people remain glued to their phones while talking, so I have no apps on mine.

Good companies do whatever it takes to make sure apps are great and don't hesitate to add features.

I don't consider ideas for apps all that valuable. It's the implementation of an idea that matters.

If you've got five or six cloud apps, do you want a different user ID and password for each one? No.

To put it simply, it doesn't matter how many other messaging apps are out there if all of them suck.

I'm not really on dating apps. I used to be when I was younger. I'd rather meet people in real life.

We struggle with this every single day - will third-party apps have room in the future of ecosystems?

Why the hell do I have to keep updating my apps on my iPhone all the time and why you don't fix that?

Your writers write these pieces about meaningless startups, meaningless apps and meaningless companies.

The most successful apps have taken a societal problem and built an accessible and democratic solution.

Sometimes I'll use four or five different photo apps on one photo just to get it where I want it to be.

I like the app where you can make your own memes. I make memes all the time and send them to my friends.

Dating apps are brilliant for expanding your actual social network, which leads you to meet other people.

WhatsApp deliberately obfuscates their apps' binaries to make sure no one is able to study them thoroughly.

I use a lot of the Web 2.0 apps that I've seen out there, and I think there is incredible work going on there.

Share This Page