If you put garbage in a computer nothing comes out but garbage. But this garbage, having passed through a very expensive machine, is somehow ennobled and none dare criticize it.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You can't put rubbish into a computer and get something good out.
Garbage can provide important details for hackers: names, telephone numbers, a company's internal jargon.
Computers may save time but they sure waste a lot of paper. About 98 percent of everything printed out by a computer is garbage that no one ever reads.
Garbage is the part of your history you don't want your family to know about.
Some trash is recycled, some is thrown away, some ends up where it shouldn't end up.
I have always been interested in garbage: What it says about us. What in there embarrasses us, and what we can't bear to part with. Where it goes and how much of it there is. How it endures. What it might be like to work with it every day.
Ever since I learned about the concept of garbage collection in 6.001 at MIT in 1984 while using Scheme on HP Chipmunks, I've always thought of dreaming as the same as garbage collection for a computer.
We need to address our Nation's mounting garbage problem by generating less garbage, particularly paper waste.
I detest computers. If you had a device like that 30 years ago that froze up constantly, misbehaved constantly, lost your information and screwed up when you needed it the most, it would have been laughable.
The computer brings out the worst in some people.