Robot Programming Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about Robot Programming with everyone.
Top Robot Programming Quotes

I've found that one must try and teach people that there's no top limit to disaster-that, so long as breath remains in your body, you've got accept the miseries of life. They will often seem infinite, insupportable. They are part of the human condition. — Ian Fleming

Mother was a great force in her area of evangelism. — Jessi Colter

I do not want to be a robot, a cog in society who answers 'yes' because 'yes' is considered the appropriate answer. Neither do I want to be a protestor. I just want to seek out what lies underneath the veils of politeness and programming that I've been given as a person in this society. — Damien Rice

Eleven reasons you want to become a robot:
1. Robots are logical and know their purpose.
2. Robots have programming they understand.
3. Robots are not held to unattainable standards and then criticized when they fail.
4. Robots are not crippled by emotions they don't know how to process.
5. Robots are not judged based on what sex organs they were born with.
6. Robots have mechanical bodies that are strong and durable. They are not required to have sex.
7. Robots do not feel guilt (about existing, about failing, about being something other than expected).
8. Robots can multitask.
9. Robots do not feel unsafe all the time.
10. Robots are perfect machines that are capable and functional and can be fixed if something breaks.
11. Robots are happy. — A. Merc Rustad

Hope was always out ahead of fact, possibility obscured the outlines of reality. — Wallace Stegner

It is the government's strong desire to empower this fabric, this social fabric of our society where faith-based programs large and small feel empowered, encouraged, and welcomed into changing lives. — George W. Bush

I still got dreams like anybody else, an ever so often, I am thinkin about how things might of been. — Winston Groom

Each of us has a private Austen. — Karen Joy Fowler

The nasty little secret was that I couldn't read worth a darn. In my case, I still read very slowly to this moment. — Charles R. Schwab