Monday 2 August 2021

Inspirational Quotes from Leaders in Tech

Here is a great list of inspirational quotes from some of the most successful CEOs and leaders of digital tech companies, curated by the Viewired review team.

“It’s fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure.”- Bill Gates, Co-founder of Microsoft

"You can't have everything you want, but you can have the things that really matter to you." - Marissa Mayer, President and CEO of Yahoo!

“The biggest risk is not taking any risk… In a world that’s changing really quickly, the only strategy that is guaranteed to fail, is not taking risks.” - Mark Zuckerberg, Co-founder of Facebook

"If you're offered a seat on a rocket ship, don't ask what seat." - Sheryl Sandberg, CEO of Lean In.

“If you don't innovate fast, disrupt your industry, disrupt yourself, you'll be left behind.” - John Chambers, CEO of Cisco

"We want to build technology that everybody loves using, and that affects everyone. We want to create beautiful, intuitive services and technologies that are so incredibly useful that people use them twice a day. Like they use a toothbrush. There aren't that many things people use twice a day." - Larry Page, co-founder Google

“Customers should be number one, Employees number two, and then only your Shareholders come at number three.” -Jack Ma, Founder, Alibaba

"Transparency within your organization is the difference between having a business that's simply running, and having one that's moving in one direction." - Michael Riedijk, CEO of PageFreezer

“If you're competitor-focused, you have to wait until there is a competitor doing something. Being customer-focused allows you to be more pioneering.” - Jeff Bezos, Founder of Amazon

“The problem is that at a lot of big companies, process becomes a substitute for thinking. You're encouraged to behave like a little gear in a complex machine. Frankly, it allows you to keep people who aren't that smart, who aren't that creative. “ - Elon Musk, Founder of PayPal and Tesla

“Taking care of your employees is extremely important and very, very visible.” - Larry Ellison, Founder of Oracle

“The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” - Alan Kay, computer scientist

"Stay hungry, stay foolish" - Steve Job, Founder of Apple

"Growth and comfort do not coexist." - Ginni Rometty, CEO of IBM

“Trust is a serious problem, we have to get to a new level of transparency – only through radical transparency will we get to radical new levels of trust.” - Marc R. Benioff, CEO of SalesForce

“Keep going forward because success will come” - Cassandra Sanford, CEO Kelly Mitchell Group

For more great tech content, check out Viewired today.

Wednesday 16 June 2021

Quotes on Technology that predict our Future

Can anyone today sit and predict what is going to happen in the future? No, so instead here are the Viewired review team we have shared what the biggest technologists and entrepreneurs think about technology.

1. Seth Shostak (Senior Astronomer at the SETI Institute)

“By 2020, most home computers will have the computing power of a human brain. That doesn’t mean that they are brains, but it means that in terms of raw processing, they can process bits as fast as a brain can. So the question is, how far behind that is the development of a machine that’s as smart as we are?”

2. Bruce Schneier (Security Technologist & Author)

“The internet is no longer a web that we connect to. Instead, it’s a computerized, networked, and interconnected world that we live in. This is the future, and what we’re calling the Internet of Things.”

3. Ginni Rometty (CEO of IBM)

“Some people call this artificial intelligence, but the reality is this technology will enhance us. So instead of artificial intelligence, I think we’ll augment our intelligence.“

4. Ben Hoffman (CEO of Movimento)

“There’s too much data today and there will be too much data in the future by a factor of a thousand.”

5. Dieter Bohn (Executive Editor, The Verge)

“Right now we have been and are building the future of computing, and what if mean to be connected to the internet, for the vast majority of human being”

6. Eric Schmit (Former Executive Chairman & CEO, Google)

“Mobile is the future, and there is no such thing as communication overloaded.”

7. Dennis Muilenburg (Chief Executive Officer of Boeing)

“The future of innovation has to include not only the technology, but economic viability.”

8. Frans van Houten (Chief Executive Officer of Philips)

“By innovating and investing in health technology, we believe that we can really change the future of health.”

9. Tim Berners-Lee (Inventor of WWW)

“The Web as I envisaged it, we have not seen it yet. The future is still so much bigger than the past.”

10. Dean Kamen (Inventor of Segway)

“Everybody has to be able to participate in a future that they want to live for. That’s what technology can do.”

For all the latest and greatest technology content, check out Viewired today.

Monday 17 May 2021

Inspirational Quotes from Leaders in Tech

Here is a great list of inspirational quotes from some of the most successful CEOs and leaders of digital tech companies, curated by the Viewired review team.

“It’s fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure.”- Bill Gates, Co-founder of Microsoft

"You can't have everything you want, but you can have the things that really matter to you." - Marissa Mayer, President and CEO of Yahoo!

“The biggest risk is not taking any risk… In a world that’s changing really quickly, the only strategy that is guaranteed to fail, is not taking risks.” - Mark Zuckerberg, Co-founder of Facebook

"If you're offered a seat on a rocket ship, don't ask what seat." - Sheryl Sandberg, CEO of Lean In.

“If you don't innovate fast, disrupt your industry, disrupt yourself, you'll be left behind.” - John Chambers, CEO of Cisco

"We want to build technology that everybody loves using, and that affects everyone. We want to create beautiful, intuitive services and technologies that are so incredibly useful that people use them twice a day. Like they use a toothbrush. There aren't that many things people use twice a day." - Larry Page, co-founder Google

“Customers should be number one, Employees number two, and then only your Shareholders come at number three.” -Jack Ma, Founder, Alibaba

"Transparency within your organization is the difference between having a business that's simply running, and having one that's moving in one direction." - Michael Riedijk, CEO of PageFreezer

“If you're competitor-focused, you have to wait until there is a competitor doing something. Being customer-focused allows you to be more pioneering.” - Jeff Bezos, Founder of Amazon

“The problem is that at a lot of big companies, process becomes a substitute for thinking. You're encouraged to behave like a little gear in a complex machine. Frankly, it allows you to keep people who aren't that smart, who aren't that creative. “ - Elon Musk, Founder of PayPal and Tesla

“Taking care of your employees is extremely important and very, very visible.” - Larry Ellison, Founder of Oracle

“The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” - Alan Kay, computer scientist

"Stay hungry, stay foolish" - Steve Job, Founder of Apple

"Growth and comfort do not coexist." - Ginni Rometty, CEO of IBM

“Trust is a serious problem, we have to get to a new level of transparency – only through radical transparency will we get to radical new levels of trust.” - Marc R. Benioff, CEO of SalesForce

“Keep going forward because success will come” - Cassandra Sanford, CEO Kelly Mitchell Group

For more great technology content, check out Viewired today.

Thursday 29 April 2021

Women You Should Thank Every Time You Use a Computer

These smart women made for some significant and groundbreaking changes in technology, and so we here at the Viewired review team celebrate them!

She changed how computers work

Grace Hopper was instrumental in creating modern programming languages used by the likes of Microsoft. She believed that programming language should use English rather than machine code, revolutionizing technology in the mid-1900s. Hopper also invented the term “debugging” when she pulled a stuck moth out of a computer.

She made computers friendly

Graphic designer Susan Kare created many of the cheery Macintosh icons, fonts, and other elements that are still used today. She made the “Command” key icon, the “paint bucket” icon now widely used in image editing programs, the “Chicago” font, and more.

She helped create the internet

Radia Perlman resists being called “the mother of the internet,” though the nickname has stuck for a reason. The network protocols she developed in the 1980s helped lay the groundwork for the connectivity we enjoy today.

For more great technology content, check out Viewired today.

Tuesday 30 March 2021

Amazing Facts about Steve Jobs

Here are some amazing facts about the incredible man, Steve Jobs, curated by the Viewired review team.

He was adopted

His biological father, Abdulfattah Jandali, grew up in Syria and met his biological mother, Joanne Schieble at the University of Wisconsin. At the age of 23, they both thought it was too young to marry and having a child out of wedlock was unconventional so they gave their baby to Steve's adoptive parents, Paul and Clara. They raised him on the promise that he would go to college.

He was bullied

In the sixth grade, Steve attended at Crittenden Middle School where he was bullied for allegedly being odd. This resulted in Steve giving his parents an ultimatum - he would drop out of school if they didn't move. So, they moved to Los Altos in California (the birthplace of Apple) where he met fellow engineer Bill Fernandez, who introduced him to Apple's co-founder Steve Wozniak.

He was a Zen Buddhist

In 1974 after working with electronics and video game company, Atari, Jobs travelled to India for 7 months in search for spiritual enlightenment. He meditated often, and was a known pescatarian - eating fish but not meat. He also liked to walk barefoot.

He was a college dropout

Jobs graduated from Homestead High School in Silicon Valley, but dropped out of Reed College in Oregon because he didn't want to spend his parent's money. Although he did attend some classes, including calligraphy. In his 2005 commencement speech for Stanford University, Jobs stated that if he didn't drop into that class the Mac wouldn't have had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts.

He experimented with psychedelics

Jobs experimented with LSD a few times claiming that it was a "profound experience" and "one of the most important things" in his life. He claimed it helped him to think differently.

He ripped off his partner Steve Wozniak

When Jobs worked for Atari, he had to make a circuit board for the video game Breakout. He told Wozniak that they would split the profit evenly if they could use less "TTL" chips. Jobs apparently told Wozniak that the pay out was $700 giving him $350. In fact Atari gave a sum of $5000 - which meant that Wozniak was owed $2500.

Hewlett Packard offered Jobs a summer job

When Jobs was 12 HP founder Bill Hewlett offered him a summer job after Steve called him asking for parts for an electronics project. It was known that Jobs had a keen interest in engineering from a young age as he used to help his guardian, Paul, fix things on his workbench.

He was fired from Apple

Jobs was fired because Pepsi Executive John Sculley told the board that he was far too young. This was after Jobs recruited him. Jobs then started another project creating the NeXT computer, but sales were limited because it was too expensive.

If you love technology then you will love all the content and eBooks you can find at Viewired.

Wednesday 24 February 2021

The best non-fiction books on technology to read now

If you want to improve your understanding of technology, then read these great tech books curated by the team at Viewired. Our tech book reviews will have you wanting more!

Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Max Tegmark’s landmark book, Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, explores the methodology behind today’s AI systems and the impact that artificial intelligence could have on humanity in the long run.

While Alexa is a long way from taking over the world, we’re already starting to rely on AI systems to sift through job applications, interpret large quantities of data, drive our cars, and decide what news we do and don’t hear every day – and this is just the start. Tegmark offers a mix of possible outcomes, both good and bad, for our development of AI and gives a stark warning to those thinking there’s no work to be done in terms of safeguarding our future against the latter.

How To Do Nothing: Resisting The Attention Economy

Jenny Odell’s book is not about relaxation or mindfulness, so much as the necessity of disengaging from the distracting world of endless news feeds and scrolling social media to re-engage more consciously with the world around you.

How To Do Nothing reads as much as a guide to naturalism as it does activism, moving seamlessly from the grand aims of tech libertarianism to the refusals of hermits and naturalists and even performance artists questioning the appearance of business we so often find ourselves investing in. The total is a complex picture of how our political, technological and environmental landscapes combine – making this one book you shouldn’t scroll past.

Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow

If you have an ear to the ground for bestselling books on technology, you’ll likely have heard of Yuval Noah Harari’s Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow. Acting as a sequel or sibling to Sapiens – a chronicle of human civilization up to the present day – Homo Deus charts human evolution to paint a likely picture of the future and is well worth looking for any budding futurists.

If you love tech, then check out all the great reviews at Viewired today.

Tuesday 2 February 2021

Must-Read Tech eBooks in 2021

The majority of tech gurus got their knowledge either from books or practically. Tech eBooks provide you with all the solutions to all the possible situations you might encounter. Here are some of the best eBooks for readers who love technology.

Cyber Privacy - Falcon Doss

When you are in the digital world and using social medial, anyone can access your information. Someone can use your browsing history to predict your behaviors and attitudes. Some of these people have their hidden intentions, while others only want to influence the items you buy. The author of this eBook emphasizes that this is very questionable. What if they decide to use the data for malicious or scam reasons?

Scientific Freedom - Donald W. Braben

Donald is a well-known writer for his week in venture research. His research pays off when it transforms the entire industries and economies. When Max Plank came up with the quantum physics theory, the nature of research started to make sense to many people. The author indicates that high public funds for a science research project require budgeted spending. This system comprises a peer review that will have great returns.

The Hype Machine - Sinan Aral

Sinan Aral takes readers on an educative tour of how social media affects their decisions. The Hype Machine was rated among the best-selling books in 2020. The eBook offers insights into the trending social media trends on the 2020 election.

If you are looking for tech eBooks, please sign up with Viewired.com.