I used Agitator on some code I had unit-tested, and it made me a better tester. As an Agitar Fellow, I look forward to the leverage of working with an outstanding organization as together we continue to improve the value of developer testing.
‐‐ Kent Beck
I used all diligence to arrive at London and therefore I now gave my crew a certificate under my hand, of my free and willing return, without persuasion or force by any one or more of them.
‐‐ Henry Hudson
I used all that doubt as fuel for my own music, fuel for my drive to succeed.
‐‐ Jody Watley
I used almost every penny I ever made to build recording studios in every city I lived in. I don't have much to show for all the TV money except a lot of musical gear and a lot of songs.
‐‐ John Tesh
I used Atlantic like I was supposed to.
‐‐ Ty Dolla Sign
I used biomechanics to save time when I was competing.
‐‐ Edwin Moses
I used cartoons as diaries. I still do. They're my way of figuring out the world, what's happening to me or what I'm thinking about.
‐‐ Bruce Eric Kaplan
I used desperately to want to be a brooding hero from literature, but I'm optimistic, healthy and fair-haired.
‐‐ Nick Harkaway
I used drugs as a social activity; a way to have fun with friends.
‐‐ Lorna Luft
I used Evernote almost exclusively for researching 'The 4-Hour Body.' I was able to eliminate all of the perpetually open tabs and multiple bookmarking services. It's also all automatically backed up to Evernote, which gives me peace of mind.
‐‐ Timothy Ferriss
I used fashion to express myself as much as I could. But at some point, it was not enough.
‐‐ Thierry Mugler
I used food as a coping mechanism for many, many years, and it was my best friend for a long time.
‐‐ Carnie Wilson
I used homeopathy, acupuncture, yoga and meditation in conjunction with my chemotherapy to help me get stronger again after the cancer. I also chanted with Buddhist friends and prayed with Christian friends. I covered all my bases.
‐‐ Olivia Newton-John
I used Jimmy to give me what I needed to keep going and to know that I was on the right path with it. I thought I saw Jimmy's soul all the time we worked. He never covered his soul and I never covered mine. We saw into each other's souls, very definitely.
‐‐ Kim Novak
I used language because I wanted to offer content that people - not necessarily art people - could understand.
‐‐ Jenny Holzer
I used my aviation contacts to open a travel agency. I used to book Caribbean flights.
‐‐ Joseph Force Crater
I used my captors' names every chance I had. It was intentional, a way of reminding them that I saw them, of pegging them, of making them see me in return.
‐‐ Amanda Lindhout
I used my instincts. It's very easy to imagine how you'd feel, actually. I just had to tell the narrative.
‐‐ Christopher Eccleston
I used my mother's radio as a PA system. I'd take the telephone, the speaking part, and take those two leads off and lead them into the radio and the sound would come out of the speaker.
‐‐ Les Paul
I used my NEA fellowship to write my novel, 'In Country,' which was published by Harper & Row in 1985.
‐‐ Bobbie Ann Mason
I used practically all the money I had available.
‐‐ Bernard Ebbers
I used ribosomes from very, very robust bacteria under very, very active conditions and found a way - I actually took advantage of research done before me at the Weizmann, the same institute I am now - how to preserve their activity and their integrity while they crystallized.
‐‐ Ada Yonath
I used slam dunking as a tool for intimidation.
‐‐ Dominique Wilkins
I used some vivid language that, if I could take it back, I'd take it back. It's not my intention to be personally critical of the President or of anyone else.
‐‐ Paul O'Neill
I used the aspects of being a woman to my advantage, but I worked for myself, not a big corporation, so I was lucky to have the freedom to behave however I liked.
‐‐ Diane von Furstenberg
I used the diabetes as my weapon. Of course, I was only hurting myself and making myself sicker, but I guess it was something I had to go through. I never went overboard so much that I really hurt myself, but my early teenage years were very tough.
‐‐ Dana Hill
I used the dictionary very minimally and I just wrote how I speak. And I speak very hateful manner usually. I constantly did that because I think the fans would get more out of it if they understood exactly what I'm saying - exactly where I'm coming from.
‐‐ Kerry King
I used the music kind of as therapy, and it's just amazing that I feel so free after doing that. I feel like I had it trapped inside of me and now I feel free. So it's been a very good therapy session for me as well.
‐‐ Vanilla Ice
I used the name Diplo at one show when I was really young, and it just stuck. I never meant to keep it. But it's kinda cool.
‐‐ Diplo
I used the name Jane Roe because I didn't want my personal name to be involved in it.
‐‐ Norma McCorvey
I used the pen name because I knew I wanted to write better novels under my own name someday.
‐‐ Nelson DeMille
I used the principles of Kickstarter to make 'She's Gotta Have It.' We filmed that in 1985 to 1986. The final cost was $175,000. I didn't have that money. It was friends, grants, donations. We saved our bottles for the nickel deposit.
‐‐ Spike Lee
I used the so-called Laffer Curve all the time in my classes and with anyone else who would listen to me to illustrate the trade-off between tax rates and tax revenues.
‐‐ Arthur Laffer
I used the stormy gray and heather brown shadows from the Lilac Rose Eye Palette to create a soft smokey eye for Veronica Beard's Spring 2013 show. The look was dramatic but delicate.
‐‐ Bobbi Brown
I used this line to demonstrate how important colors are in movies: It's not a caprice.
‐‐ Pedro Almodovar
I used to a lot. I used to go dancing.
‐‐ Parker Stevenson
I used to a play a role-playing game called Dungeons and Dragons, and that was about levels of experience; as you gained experience, you were able to deal with much greater and far more kind of global creatures.
‐‐ Ben Edlund
I used to act in television commercials when I was a kid and a young adult.
‐‐ Dani Shapiro
I used to agonise over what to do next, but now I'm making a movie a year. It's insane, but it's only a movie after all. You just hang in there, and occasionally you might make something which you can call art... briefly.
‐‐ Ridley Scott
I used to always be putting my hat on children being photographed and then getting home and discovering I was riddled with lice. That used to happen very, very regularly. I used to get headlice all the time.
‐‐ Tom Baker
I used to always be the young one playing without pressure, but I am just happy to be where I am and enjoying my time.
‐‐ Caroline Wozniacki
I used to always buy clothes too big, but I should have showed off instead of covering up.
‐‐ Carey Lowell
I used to always fight for human rights. I still fight for Leonard Peltier, who's spent 35 years in jail for a crime he didn't commit.
‐‐ Vivienne Westwood
I used to always go to church on holidays, but I don't go much any more.
‐‐ Michael Phelps
I used to always judge other people's mistakes in the mountains. I think a bit differently now. Everybody's gotten away with a mistake or poor decision out there at one point or another, but sometimes it catches up to you, or sometimes you're just plain unlucky.
‐‐ Jimmy Chin
I used to always make art for girls. That was the thing I did for girls to like me. I did portraits, drawings, letters that formed outlines of significant things in our relationship. Art. I just used art in general. It usually worked.
‐‐ Cary Fukunaga
I used to always prefer to text, and in fact got indignant when people called. This was totally irrational.
‐‐ Matt Mullenweg
I used to always read my stuff. And I could never understand why artists would say, 'Oh, I can't read my older stuff.' I'd go, 'Are you crazy? I could read my stuff forever!' Now it's a little harder.
‐‐ Jaime Hernandez
I used to always run off at the mouth and talk about people. I just didn't know that it would make a living for me.
‐‐ D. L. Hughley