I don't edit on laptops anymore.

My laptop has freed me to travel.

Can you imagine Grandmaster Flash on a laptop?

I write on a computer, on a laptop or whatever.

I write with a pen and paper. Never on a laptop.

I'm a great fan of taking my laptop out and about.

I'm terribly forgetful. I've lost laptops, cell-phones.

I can write absolutely anywhere. All I need is a laptop.

The laptop brings back a more seamless kind of learning.

I'm not good at selling laptops. I'm good at selling ideas.

I'm pretty rough on my laptops. I go through about two a year.

It's 2013, and you can make music anywhere. We've got laptops.

I write on a laptop, so it's impossible to count drafts anymore.

I do indeed write on the road. My laptop goes with me everywhere.

I don't go anywhere without my iPod, laptop and at least one book.

Everything will be okay. I have a sticker on my laptop that says that.

I don't think I'm unusual in preferring my laptop to be thin and light.

A businessman needs a laptop. Athletes need massages and the right diet.

I'm portable. I carry a laptop and a little recording studio on my back.

Stop using your phones and laptops as toys and use them to start a revolution.

Nowadays you can record on your laptop with Pro Tools, which I do quite often.

I see people with laptops as being enslaved to something they can't live without.

I need to travel, of course, with my laptop, so I can do my business on the road.

Computing is a big segment. It's more than just mobile devices or PCs and laptops.

It is easy for people to sit behind their laptops and assassinate somebody's character.

I do it live on tape with a band. It's not like I'm doing electronic music with a laptop.

With '5 Boroughs,' we were each working on beats, sitting in front of our laptops and samplers.

I work on a laptop specifically so I can work in cafes and pretend I'm part of the human world.

Once you get to naming your laptop, you know that you're really having a deep relationship with it.

My goal is not selling laptops. OLPC is not in the laptop business. It's in the education business.

I started accessible GPS research in 1994 and the first version became available on a laptop in 2000.

We don't know where we get our ideas from. What we do know is that we do not get them from our laptops.

The modern listening experience is one of solitude, where someone just listens to music on their laptop.

Growing up, I wish that I'd had the supplies and laptops and all the new technology that's out right now.

My studio is a laptop. Everybody I work with is the same. We make computer music, we're the laptop generation.

If you think back to the beginning of cell phones, laptops or really any new technology, it's always expensive.

The Arab Spring is over. The days of the protesters with laptops and BlackBerrys in Tahrir Square are long gone.

Nowadays anyone with a crap laptop and an Internet connection can sound their barbaric yawp, whatever it may be.

My husband and I own half a dozen iPods, a Mac desktop, and four Mac laptops. We're clearly fans of Mr. Jobs' work.

The correct form factor for a laptop is obviously 12" and 2 lbs, and I don't understand why everybody gets that wrong.

Students do everything on laptops these days, so I definitely think electronic books are a trend that's going to expand.

Kids are on their keyboards so much, between their smartphones and laptops, no one writes anything anymore. It's atrocious.

I don't go crazy buying expensive technology. I'd probably say my laptops and TVs are the most expensive things I've bought.

I never leave my computer open. That becomes a big OCD thing. If I see people leaving their laptops open, I always close them.

No one shuts their laptop after looking at pornography and says, 'What a productive time I just spent connecting with the world!'

The reason I'm an I.B.M.-type guy today is that I really needed a laptop back in 1986, and I just couldn't wait for the Powerbook.

Laptop computers dramatically increased the time people spend doing work. (The internet dramatically decreased it, so we're even).

I should prefer to have a politician who regularly went to a massage parlour than one who promised a laptop computer for every teacher.

We writers dream of a future where actors are mostly computer generated and their performances can be adjusted, by us, on a laptop, alone.

I have switched on this modern laptop machine. And I have told myself that I must resist the temptation to start playing solitaire upon it.

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