(In cooking), there is always room for careful tinkering.

The first rule of intelligent tinkering is to save all the parts.

I love writing stand-up so much and tinkering and looking for ideas.

Have Liverpool done too much tinkering and tailoring with the system?

I wasn't much into girlfriends. I was too busy tinkering in the garage.

Tinkering with, and building the products Robinhood ships brings me joy.

From this day forward, I no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death.

To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.

At heart, I am still the guy who loves tinkering with machines and writing code.

As a kid growing up in a rural area, I was always tinkering with parts and machinery.

The age of mass politics is one that demands radical solutions rather than tinkering.

I was always into science fiction as a kid. I loved science and tinkering with things.

I like tinkering with the tribe beat boxes and love using Reason as a beefed up beat box.

Love life seems to be that factor which requires the largest quantity of magical tinkering.

We cannot restore traditional American freedom unless we limit the government's power to tax.

You're always trying to get better. You're always tinkering. You're always learning new things.

Fed and electoral college could use some tinkering, but they are not the source of the problems.

I'm not a big fan of the George Lucas school of meddling and tinkering. That's a slippery slope.

If the land mechanism as a whole is good then every part is good, whether we understand it or not.

Yeah, some of my college friends and I have been tinkering around for years, you know, just for fun.

Never let an inventor run a company. You can never get him to stop tinkering and bring something to market

Never let an inventor run a company. You can never get him to stop tinkering and bring something to market.

Design has long gone from tinkering and sketching of auteurs in isolation to a powerful catalyzer of growth.

Mastery in poetry consists largely in the instinct for not ruining or smothering or tinkering with moments of vision.

Tinkering is a way of understanding difficult problems, of wrapping our heads around them and quantifying the unknowns.

Congress is going to start tinkering with the Ten Commandments just as soon as they find someone in Washington who has read them.

'Humans of New York' did not result from a flash on inspiration. It grew from five years of experimenting, tinkering, and messing up.

Tinkering is something we need to know how to do in order to keep something like the space station running. I am a tinkerer by nature.

I'm always tinkering with something - suddenly I'll think I can work with wood, but then I'll realize I can't, so I go back to sewing.

I spent my childhood tinkering with electronic circuits, on breadboards, as they used to be called, in particular making radio transmitters.

As a kid, I was less interested in the physical tinkering than thinking about what we would now call the physics, as opposed to the engineering.

You can go as far back as fifth grade, and you will find me tinkering with media and computers, making things that are a little off the beaten track.

I like taking things apart and putting them back together. Tinkering. I'd be a professional tinkerer. Tinkerbell. I think that's what they're called.

I'm sort of an old man, always tinkering in the backyard. Since I grew up playing outdoors, I still like to plant things, sit out on the deck, or go hiking.

MPs are so cowed by the institutions and the scale of official failure that they generally just muddle along tinkering and hope to stay a step ahead of the media.

Before you open the lunch menu or order that cheeseburger or consider eating the cake with the frosting intact, haul out the psychic calculator and start tinkering with the budget.

Virginia 's tax system needs to be fixed. The time to act is now. Do not send me any more studies. Do not send me another piecemeal approach that confuses tinkering with real reform.

We've been tinkering with nature for tens of thousands of years - look at a poodle! So we've created all sorts of organisms and biological things that wouldn't be here were it not for us.

After I joined Google and stopped working on robots - I'd built some self-driving tractors on farms in the meantime - I was always tinkering and playing with robots at home and just as a hobby.

Building and tinkering were such a huge part of our childhood, whether we were trying to entertain ourselves as kids, helping our parents out on the ranch, or getting creative with school projects.

I'm a contract computer scientist by trade, but I'm the founder of something called the Tinkering School. It's a summer program which aims to help kids to learn how to build the things that they think of.

If you build a Model T and you can see the Camry, you don't spend time tinkering with the T; you go straight to the next thing. Once you build the Camry, you can see the Ferrari, so you go straight to that.

We wouldn't have to speak so critically if businesses would stop feeding dead animals to live ones, putting non-food substances into food, tinkering with genetic codes, and spraying the countryside with poisons.

Starting early and getting girls on computers, tinkering and playing with technology, games and new tools, is extremely important for bridging the gender divide that exists now in computer science and in technology.

We are nature. Our every tinkering is nature, our every biological striving. We are what we are, and the world is ours. We are its gods. Your only difficulty is your unwillingness to unleash your potential fully upon it.

America's tax code is beyond repair. Tinkering with it won't work. The only hope is a bold tax-reform plan that will liberate our nation from the slow-growth status quo and jump-start a new era of American prosperity and growth.

Perhaps our originality manifests itself most strikingly in what we do with that which we did not originate. To discover something wholly new can be a matter of chance, of idle tinkering, or even of the chronic dissatisfaction of the untalented.

I loved when my dad was home. He liked to sit in the living room and watch boxing and baseball on TV. Or he'd be tinkering around or listening to records by his musician buddies - George Shearing, Oscar Peterson and the Jackie Gleason Orchestra.

I got in the school band and the school choir. It all hit me like a ton of bricks, everything just came out. I played percussion for a while, and stayed after school forever just tinkering around with different things, the clarinets and the violins.

I think my dad did legal work for someone who had a Packard Bell 8088, and they couldn't pay him, so they gave him a computer. I was initially not allowed to touch it, but that didn't last long. I started tinkering with it, and there were many times I screwed up the computer.

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