Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Disk. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Disk Quotes And Sayings by 92 Authors including Deyth Banger,Ellen Degeneres,Drake,Marissa Meyer,Jam Master Jay for you to enjoy and share.
The world is small, but how we have so many information, so many questions how do they find space???
If I put it on the disk, some how it will reach a limit and I can't download or install on this disk, but on the planet there isn't limit. But the planet is a small!
So, I bought a new CD and I was trying to get it open but couldn't with all the layers ... I mean plastic and then tape, and the tape is like government tape. It says 'open here.' Is that sarcasm?
Buzz so big I could probably sell a blank disc.
Database. Another
With this CD technology, you can just remix a record right there on the spot.
Graydon: "Where are those files you wanted me to look at? I can never figure out the new system on the shared drive, and you promised you'd show me. Call me back when you can."
No, son. You can figure it out on your own. I have faith in you.
My drive is still cool, it's not like how when I first began. I don't think anyone's drive is the same.
The folder thick enough to contain a hundred headaches.
A few fat files are better than a lot of thin ones.
No matter what documents you investigate, and what objects you retrieve, you many never answer the questions that are most important to you, but nevertheless, sooner or later you must finish whatever file you have begun.
Students present themselves ... like a succession of CDs whose shimmering surface gives no clue to their contents without the equipment to play them.
As system virtualization becomes mainstream, IT managers will find a greater need for disk imaging for disaster recovery and systems deployment,.
As music migrates into our iPods, CD collections require less and less room, residing in our heads rather than resounding off the walls. The protracted labor of amassing a personal music library has lost its detective zeal.
Now that I have a thousand albums in my car all the time, I listen to more music. I was too lazy; I always had the same five discs in there. I'd never think to change it.
I've got tons of irreplaceable information inside the soul of this computer.
We have over 60 million machines that can take the same diskette, plug it in and immediately ah, that that software's working. And so it's created the worldwide software industry that ... that is so very competitive and moving so quickly.
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As I get ready to buy a new computer, I'm stunned at all the many micro drafts, of different chapters and scenes and whatnot, that litter the hard drive.
the music player.
computer). This is where they polish their final images,
When they were done downloading all the information off each hard drive, they took all the computers, all the literature, and loaded everything into a big white truck and left.
I collect movies. So I have all those in binders. I don't have the DVDs out. I put them in binders.
Poor fellow, he suffers from files.
I'm a Beatles fan, and I remember in the mid-1980s, when CDs first came out, there was a sound of vinyl and the sound of the needle on it that people loved, and suddenly CDs were threatening.
You come to work because the office is a resource: The office is a place where you can meet with other people, and the office has libraries of books and information on CD-ROM that might help you with your work.
Kids don't go out and buy CDs, they make their own, they download them from the Internet.
I buy DVDs. I don't really buy CDs unless they're for other people.
I think it does Discworld good if I don't write about it all the time: sometimes you have to get it out of your system.
My favorite laser disk ever was the laser disk for The Graduate, which had a commentary track that wasn't even the filmmakers, it was a professor, some film criticism guy who just happen to be this amazing commentator who went off into the whole theory of comedy.
Eventually you're going to have a digital transfer anyway when you make a CD, so it doesn't matter as long as what you're hitting first is what you want it to be.
There's two different disks recorded at two different shows. And they're two very different shows. The San Francisco disk was in front of 450 people and was a real professional show where people did their best stuff. So to some people that's going to be their favorite disk.
Mom says I should erase it. That this present is our reality and everything on this little drive is fiction.
She may be right. But there's plenty of truth in fiction.
I don't need a hard disk in my computer if I can get to the server faster ... carrying around these non-connected computers is byzantine by comparison.
We have persistant objects, they're called files.
When I record something, I'll take a drive and just listen.
computer-majiggies,
To burn a CDR of music you like to give as a gift to someone you wish to become closer to is a cold, moist-palmed, mouth-breathing bummer.
I have Pro Tools on my computer, and I make CDs all the time.
Discs and memory are far cheaper than annoying your customers.
Digital books and music are often different from their physical counterparts in that consumers buy licences to a work, revocable under an ongoing contract, rather than their own copies.
'Discworld' is taking something that you know is ridiculous and treating it as if it is serious, to see if something interesting happens when you do so.
I've been very happy with the commercial Linux CD-ROM vendors linux Red Hat.
If the disk crashes - taking all of your source code with it - and you don't have a backup, it's your fault. Telling your boss "the cat ate my source code" just won't cut it.
Tape allows for a clean sweep of data that simply doesn't need to be on any form of disk but still needs to be kept. The cost and capacity of tape makes these 'just in case' copies very affordable.
There's my education in computers, right there; this is the whole thing, everything I took out of a book.
To write has to be related to a drive inside.
Some people record onto tape, and then they pay for the tape, and download those onto a hard drive. Initially in a Pro Tools program. Other people go straight into digital, and use no tape at all.
A machine condemned to devour books and then throw them , in a changed form , on the dunghill of history .
There's a lot about records that you cannot feel from a CD.
UUID=b679d5bc-736a-46be-8e6b-b3d40e6e4caa /mnt/mydisk rw,relatime,data=ordered 0 0
the LP sleeve acquires the same scuffs, knocks and wrinkles as its purchaser. It engenders the same affection as the ageing groove. Reflective
I have a lot of compact discs. I need them for radio play and convenience. Many bands and artists I am a fan of don't always release their work on vinyl, so I take what they feel like giving me.
A computer is a wonderful thing, but it's cold, and what comes out of it is sort of cold.
Hardware: This is the part of the computer that stops working when you spill beer on it.
The thing that I've always been slightly frustrated with, was that the idea of a CD is kind of confined to a material possession that you can put on a shelf. And the idea of music, for me, is always about both the communication and the sharing of content. And so the interactive part is missing.
If you buy a DVD you have a copy. If you want a backup copy you buy another one.
I have an iPod, but I put my music in it from my CDs, and then I have that CD in my library.
CD's are amazing because you get the artwork, you get to look at the lyrics, you get to look at the behind-the-scenes photos or something.
Digital information, for every type of storage, is unfounded. If everything is on a hard drive and the hard drive freezes up, your whole photography collection could just go away. We can still look at printed photographs of our grandparents. We can physically hold them in our hands and look at it.
There was no CD tray, just a subtle slot. And as with the original Macintosh, there was no
For my second record I had gotten ProTools (program) and started to familiar myself with hard disc recording.
Memory demands an image.
You can carry a photograph with you on a thumb drive, and you can make it bigger or smaller - it's a very malleable form of mass production.
The desktop metaphor was invented because one, you were a stand-alone device, and two, you had to manage your own storage. That's a very big thing in a desktop world. And that may go away. You may not have to manage your own storage. You may not store much before too long.
I'm sure, the highest capacity of storage device, will not enough to record all our stories; because, everytime with you is very valuable data
Technically speaking, there is no music whatsoever on a CD. Lots of information, but no music.
Today, you always know whether you are on the Internet or on your PC's hard drive. Tomorrow, you will not care and may not even know.
Bookbag, Pocketshoe.
Sitting in a room, alone, listening to a CD is to be lonely. Sitting in a room alone with an LP crackling away, or sitting next to the turntable listening to a song at a time via 7-inch single is enjoying the sublime state of solitude.
The CD image remains heart-sinkingly abysmal compared to the majesty of the LP sleeve. These things count.
I'm sorry, I mouthed to him before I said out loud, The file's exactly where it should be. Stuck so far up your ass that it'll never see the light of day again.
Mary: Get me a flashdrive!
Keith: I'm on it!
We have a problem now with parents stealing their kids' CDs, so the roles have been reversed.
We have persistent objects, they're called files.
If you want data to survive, carve it in rock.
I do not buy CDs any more; I usually stream Internet radio. For movies, I hardly every buy any DVDS. I have a DVR, so just record things off HBO, Showtime and so on.
In actuality it's drum samples in the computer. I don't know, I've just never really dug into that whole technology thing, I feel like it hurts me as a musician a little.
With vinyl you had twenty-two minutes per side. CDs came along, and you had sixty, seventy, eighty minutes and people felt like they had to fill them up. They were like those Fuji apples from Japan. They look like perfect, super-gigantic versions of American apples.
I love memory sticks. They seem to me to be magic.
Everything from now on will be done online - physical music media like the CD are dead in the water.
I believe that vinyl will outlast CDs.
A CD of great music and drums that punch with power and energy.
I hate the way CDs just drone on for bloody hours and you stop caring.
I am a laptop boy. People say: 'Where's your studio?' I say: 'It's in my laptop, in my rucksack.'
Maktub" (It is written.)
Our pictures are fleeting and elusive. In the far future, bits of hard drives may be fossilized in limestone, and discarded iPhones may find themselves encased in amber, hardened like nail polish, but the bits of humanity that these exquisitely crafted machines hold will be lost to time.
What is on that memory stick, if you don't mind me asking?"
She was following him back into his apartment when he asked, and realized she still clutched it.
"Something I never want to see again.
A library is thought in cold storage.
I have a medical history folder that's a lot thicker than most.
I think it's important for people who love music to retain physical CDs or even vinyl, because it sounds so great and so much warmer than music over the internet.
I've been slightly obsessed with paper and notebooks. Among my most precious possessions is a small light-blue, breviary-sized volume - four-and-a-half inches wide, seven inches tall - made by a company called Denbigh.
People hang their hopes on you fitting into their CD collection in way that they have made a space for, but I'm playing a longer game than that.
I think there are problems with compact disc copy protection that can't be resolved.
drawing pad. He withdrew it and
I still love physical product. I still hold out for actual CDs, because in radio, everyone just wants to send you a file to play.
If you can afford ... a computer, you can afford to pay $16 for my ... CD.
I'm going to hold onto my Blu-ray collection because I really think it's hardware and it's important. I don't want to live in a cloud, all my life.
I'm a huge fan of Blu-rays myself.
Easily acquired. Inexpensive. Perfectly functional. Portable. Identifiable. Disposable. Eternal enough. These are my criteria for the perfect storage system. And I've found the answer in the simple file box.
The last person who wrote about me for the Wall Street Journal didn't even know the difference between machine memory and a floppy!