Words matter. These are the best Chris Hughes Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Buzz is not what I am looking for.
The web has introduced a competitive, and some might argue hostile, landscape for long, in-depth, resource-intensive journalism.
You name it, I’m interested in a lot of things.
My real big Internet claim to fame is the fact that I was first to jailbreak the iPhone.
I am a person who feels compelled and then gets immersed.
I fundamentally believe that people have a genuine desire to be positively engaged in the world around them.
I don’t really know what ‘community’ means. And I never use that word.
Profit per se is not my motive.
When I was 17, I went to India for six weeks and had what, at the time, was a very challenging trip. You walk down the street and you see lepers and beggars, and there were several of us, a group of Americans. I remember we were just trying to park one night somewhere and people were just sleeping in the parking lot.
I really want to move away from the old model in which you have to rely on people giving $10 after a humanitarian crisis to a newer model where people give money but also their time and their skills, whatever they have, to the causes that are personally meaningful to them well before the crisis moment presents itself.
Many of us get our news from social networks, blogs, and daily aggregators.
What’s really interesting is the introduction of the tablet – not just the iPad, but the Nook and the Kindle. While they aren’t going to solve all of our problems, I do think they make it easier for people to pause, linger, read and really process very important ideas.
I knew I wanted to do something at the nexus of what I call global development and technology.
I’m the kind of person that needs to think things through. But when I know what I want to do, I really know.
My theory of change is that there are already millions of people working day in and day out on the ground to deliver on promises on global change. We need to strengthen those institutions and help those people in the field.
You learn pretty fast that there is no magic solution to poverty.
It takes time for people to get to know a cause or an organization.
I went to boarding school Southern, religious, and straight, and I left boarding school not being at all religious and not being straight.
By 2007, we were finally living in a culture where people get what networks are and what technology can do to connect people.
I was on significant financial aid, an only child, with parents who didn’t have much living in North Carolina.
I was trying to figure out how to use the skills I had developed in the world of social change.
You can have the best technology in the world, but if you don’t have a community who wants to use it and who are excited about it, then it has no purpose.