Why shoot for the moon? It matters because when you try to do something radically hard, you approach the problem differently than when you try to make something incrementally better.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Making a moonshot is almost more an exercise in creativity than it is in technology.
Moonshot thinking starts with picking a big problem: something huge, long existing, or on a global scale.
I always shoot for the moon in my work, so that I'm happy when I land on the roof.
If you're going to go to the moon, you don't shoot the rocket right at the moon. You have to go at it obliquely.
I think that when NASA works on a moon shot, they know too well that all of the people working on it must do their job at 110 percent. Sometimes they probably put in 18 hour days, but they're aiming for the moon, and that's what counts.
It's hard not to be excited when you're going to find a way to land on the moon.
I still say, 'Shoot for the moon; you might get there.'
Question every assumption and go towards the problem, like the way they flew to the moon. We should have more moon shots and flights to the moon in areas of societal importance.
If you strive for the moon, maybe you'll get over the fence.
For a deeper interest in the Moon than I ever felt before.
No opposing quotes found.