Skype Age Quotes & Sayings
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Top Skype Age Quotes

The best part about best friends is that you can maintain a relationship at any distance. In this day and age, we have Skype, FaceTime, text messages, audio messages, photo messages, and every social media site you can think of. With my friends, I send little photo updates almost daily and do a video call every week. It's really not that difficult. We talk about anything and everything. I can confide my deepest, darkest secrets with my best friends and fear no judgment. It's actually the best. And when we have the luxury of being in the same location, we pick things up like we were never separated. It really doesn't matter where we go or what we do; it's honestly just so nice to be in each other's presence that the rest doesn't matter. — Connor Franta

We are in an age of technology where we sit in our little cubicles and we IM each other and Skype each other and never connect as human beings. — Sarah McLachlan

I think visual literacy and media literacy is not without value, but I think plain old-fashioned text literacy and mathematical literacy are much more powerful and flexible ways to organize your mind. — Neal Stephenson

I'm an old-fashioned person and I happen to believe in traditional marriage. — John Kasich

How beautiful to find a heart that loves you, without asking you for anything, but to be okay. — Kahlil Gibran

Compassion is the enemy. Mercy defeats us — Zoran

Just because something was legal didn't automatically make it right. — Carl Hiaasen

Since the Exodus, freedom has always spoken with a Hebrew accent. — Heinrich Heine

Enough with the sadness! This dream is not for cry-babies ... he said, his face beaming with a wide smile. — Cameo Renae

I'm sticking with the Heinekens, but doing a few shots here and there. — Jeff Hanneman

Lord, my life is but a mist (James 4:14), yet through Your power, the things I give myself to can have an eternal impact. I am Your vessel — Paige Omartian

Theirs [the Beatles] is a happy, cocky, belligerently resourceless brand of harmonic primitivism ... In the Liverpudlian repertoire, the indulged amateurishness of the musical material, though closely rivaled by the indifference of the performing style, is actually surpassed only by the ineptitude of the studio production method. (Strawberry Fields suggests a chance encounter at a mountain wedding between Claudio Monteverdi and a jug band.) — Glenn Gould