“They can make things, they can create things,” Kang said. “One of my students said, ‘I want to be an astronaut.’ She wants to go to space. So it’s like, ‘Well, if you want to go to space, how do you think that works?’ They’re all problem solvers, which is amazing. Just the way that they think, it surprises me. Because I’m also learning with them.”
“What we’ve got here is…failure to communicate.” — Captain,?Cool Hand Luke (1967)?
“We’re investing in this category because we believe it’s still Day One,” said Neil Lindsay, Amazon’s vice president of devices, using one of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’ favorite refrains during a demonstration of the new Kindle Oasis at the company’s?Seattle headquarters this week. “Incremental improvement isn’t enough for us. The category is still growing.”
“We appreciate that startups have different needs than more established companies,” the company says in its FAQ. “Amazon Launchpad has been designed to meet these needs while giving you the marketing benefits typically reserved for our more established Amazon vendors, right from day one.”
“We’re working, patiently and step-by-step, to lower the cost of spaceflight so that many people can afford to go and so that we humans can better continue exploring the solar system,” he wrote. “Accomplishing this mission will take a long time, and we’re working on it methodically.”
“This is the biggest economic development partnership announcement in the history of our city,” city of?Haslet?Mayor?Bob Golden said in a press release. “The jobs and potential tax base that this development will bring to our community is a major milestone in our city’s growth.”
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“To see it now is unbelievable. It’s just astounding to me,” Lambert said. “I think it’s astounding to anybody who was there at the time. … We sold books. And all I wanted was a job to get in out of the rain.”
“We think that there are strengths and weaknesses with each one of those sites,” he said. “As a region, we put forward our individual strengths that we saw, not really knowing what Amazon wanted.” He added, “all of us were very happy that when they came back with the short list.”
“We were fighting for what we thought was right for consumers, and the same is true here,” said Grandinetti in the WSJ interview.
“We always had this strong intention that we don’t want to be seen as a kingmaker,” said Chris Wright, vice president and chief technologist at Red Hat and a member of the CNCF Governing Board.