Try typing a web key on a touchscreen on an Apple iPhone, that's a real challenge. You cannot see what you type.

Last Wednesday, I stupidly dropped my iPhone in the bath, and my life has sort of spiraled almost out of control.

In China, people are selling their kidney to buy an iPhone 6. What's going to happen when the iPhone 7 comes out?

If I was to leave home without my wallet and my iPhone, and I could only go back and get one, I'd grab my iPhone.

Fifty seven million children across the world don't want an iPhone, Xbox or chocolates. They want a book and pen.

My laptop broke and because of the storm I could not get a new one. And so I've been promoting my book via iPhone.

The user interface on the iPhone, with all due respect for what this invention was all about is now five years old.

At the Apple store, the people waiting in line for the iPhone 6 were trampled by the people waiting for the iPhone 7.

Since Steve Jobs died I cannot bear to see anyone use an iPhone irreverently, what I did was a tribute to his memory.

The car was the iPhone of the 20th century. Kids these days don't have to drive anymore. They just go there virtually.

On the iPhone I tended to draw with my thumb. Whereas the moment I got to the iPad, I found myself using every finger.

My iPhone background says, 'If you build it, they'll come.' You know, quality over quantity. And I really live by that.

My primary phone is the iPhone. I love the beauty of it. But I wish it did all the things my Android does, I really do.

The worst thing for me as a filmmaker is to watch on the iPhone but you can't stop it. I think you have to adapt to it.

I was first in line for the iPhone, but I'm not a fanboy of any company - I'm in favor of anything that's best of breed.

The iPhone has completely changed how I interact with information on the go. When I travel I leave the notebook at home.

The best thing about the iPhone is this that tells me where I am all the time. Theres never a need to feel lost anymore.

The iPhone was such a phenomenon that even the humble journalists chosen for an early look were thrust into a spotlight.

I must have 25 AT&T iPhones, maybe more than that. I've got plenty of Verizons. I just don't have them in the small size.

The best thing about the iPhone is this that tells me where I am all the time. There's never a need to feel lost anymore.

There were many things that led to the iPhone at Apple. We were searching for what to do after iPod that would make sense.

I'm a technophobe. I can't crack the iPhone, and the extent of my multitasking is being able to talk while I make a drink.

I've been touring a lot, and I don't always know how to get around. Google Maps on the iPhone is pretty helpful with that.

For memes, I have an entire iPhone folder of photos that I've taken or saved because I find something about them hilarious.

My iPhone has 2 million times the storage of the 1969 Apollo 11 computer. They went to the moon. I throw birds at pig houses

I love the cowbell. I think it's awesome. My family got the cowbell app on their iPhones. It's a classic part of ski racing.

I feel like a Mac store! I have a Canadian iPhone, an American iPhone and an iPad. I'm constantly downloading music to iTunes.

Apple makes beautiful products. I own a Mac Pro, a Mac Book, a Mac Mini, an iPad, an iPhone, pretty much the entire collection.

I am so disappointed in Apple. I don't even use an iPhone anymore. Their marketing sucks. It's embarrassing. It's just garbage.

When the iPhone came out, every CIO in America said, 'You're not bringing that into our corporate environment,' my CIO included.

I actually have my first iPhone deformity because it sits on my pinky, and now my bone actually dips in where my cellphone sits.

I love being a grandparent. I'm one of those you want to avoid - I pull out the iPhone and say, 'Hey, wanna see my camera roll?'

When you look at anyone's iPod or iPhone and their music collection on there, it's not the same 10 songs. People like diversity.

Before the iPhone, cyberspace was something you went to your desk to visit. Now cyberspace is something you carry in your pocket.

I never carry a purse. My iPhone is always with me, a credit card, and a piece of mint chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream gum.

As for my prediction that this phone would be a bad idea for Apple to pursue, anything can still happen. Time is a cruel mistress.

You talk about Steve Jobs when he came out with the iPhone, and everyone thought it was amazing: you touch it and move the screen.

Some kid gets his first iPhone, signs up to Twitter, and then tweets, 'Nikki Sixx sucks.' And I'm supposed to take that personally.

I use technology for communication, but I don't have a Blackberry or an iPhone. I use an outdated cell phone, but I'm fine with it.

I love to personalize things. I love to make things my own. I like to name everything - from cars to iPhones to the socks I just lost.

Friends always ask me what the best Indian restaurant in L.A. is. I'm like, 'I don't know, dude. I have an app on my iPhone for that.'

Despite my so-so-experience with the iPhone, I do love its touchscreen technology, a feature I miss with my standard-issue BlackBerry.

When we started work on the iPhone, the motivation there was we all pretty much couldn't stand our phones, and we wanted a better phone.

I started making raps in 2014, recording stuff from my iPhone and putting them together in Sony Vegas, which is a video editing program.

You can't sit on the sidelines and read your iPhone and be on social media and expect everything to be cool. You have to be part of this.

We did not enter the search business. Google entered the phone business. Make no mistake they want to kill the iPhone. We won't let them.

The Mac defined personal technology, and the iPhone defines intimate technology as a convergence of communications, content and location.

There's plenty to admire in the iPhone X straight from the unboxing. The biggest change stares you in the face: that screen, that screen.

There's one song that I recorded called 'Saviour' and every single sound from that song was actually recorded in a shipyard on my iPhone.

The '90s and early 2000s were the 'I' decade. iPhone, the iPod - everything was about me. Look where that got us? In a terrible recession.

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