When you travel around Moscow, you can see almost every car is using a smartphone where they can see what's ahead of them.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
But if you go from Moscow to Budapest you think you are in Paris.
There's more GPS in the phone in your pocket than on most of our 21st century airliners - that's frightening.
Wouldn't it be great if cars came equipped with screens like that thing they have in Times Square that spells out the news? You could punch out your own instant messages: 'Will the small red car with the ugly driver please stay a little further behind?'
We do a lot of consumer research. Consumers believe the smartphone will be the remote, meaning that it will orchestrate a lot of things. So maybe you will take your connectivity with you to the car.
My home is in Moscow and I have no plans to change this.
Everybody calls everybody a spy, secretly, in Russia, and everybody is under surveillance. You never feel safe.
Smartphones are always in your pocket. They're about reactive capture.
We're so connected, kind of ever-presently, with technology now. People are carrying their phones with them and looking at the screen so much.
Everything in Russia is made of cement - phone booths, fence posts and light bulbs.
If you come from Paris to Budapest you think you are in Moscow.