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Quotes About Storage

I've got a lot of stuff in the bed of my truck.
~ Nicholas Sparks
I collect movies. So I have all those in binders. I don't have the DVDs out. I put them in binders.
~ Bill Hader
I don't keep any copies of my books in the house - they go to my mum's flat. I don't like them around.
~ Zadie Smith
dynamic (due to the repeated charging) random access memory, or DRAM.
~ Chris Miller
Los libros deberían de ir a parar donde más valor se les dé, y no deben quedar almacenados, acumulando polvo en algún estante olvidado.
~ Christopher Paolini
Obviously, the higher the density of an energy resource, the lower are its transportation (as well as storage) costs, and this means that its production can take place farther away from the centers of demand.
~ Vaclav Smil
Within a few centuries we are returning to the atmosphere and oceans the concentrated organic carbon stored in sedimentary rocks over hundreds of millions of years.
~ Vaclav Smil
energy densities (energy stored per unit of mass or volume, critical for energy storage and portability)
~ Vaclav Smil
For most of her life she'd been able to box up bad memories or disappointments and store them deep in the back of her mind, in a place so dark they couldn't be seen.
~ Kristin Hannah
you how to can salmon. You need to
~ Kristin Hannah
There is plenty of Hühnerfleisch in the Kühlschrank. (There is plenty of chicken in the fridge)
~ Kurt Cobain
Fully functional weapons were being haphazardly passed around by low-level officers and, in two confirmed cases, civilians. One warhead they were watching was currently parked in a retired captain's storage unit. A recon team had managed to get a fiber optic camera through the ventilation grate and the Agency was now in possession of an honest-to-God picture of a hot nuke sitting next to a set of golf clubs.
~ Kyle Mills
Henry turned as if to dart out of the room, then swung around and stared at them, a look of confusion passing over his freckled face, as if he had only now had cause to wonder why Will, Tessa, and Jem might be crouching together in a mostly disused storage room. "What are you three doing in here, anyway?" Will tilted his head to the side and smiled at Henry. "Charades," he said. "Massive game.
~ Cassandra Clare
place those files into a subdirectory of the directory containing the source file, named doc-files.
~ Cay S. Horstmann
At the other extreme, and far less threatening, will be the "house computer" of 2081. It will store all the information from all the books, musical recordings, and reminder notes that are now to be found in a well stocked home, and in addition, will filter the deluge of spoken, musical, and video information that will arrive every day at a typical home in that year, selecting and storing for later recall the information of interest to its owners.
~ Gerard K. O'Neill
while a system that is swapping is writing entire processes from memory to disk.
~ Gian-Paolo D. Musumeci
Caches are organized into equal-sized chunks called lines.
~ Gian-Paolo D. Musumeci
A picture is worth a thousand words but it takes 3,000 times the disk space.
~ Author Unknown
Back up my hard drive? How do I put it in reverse?
~ Author Unknown
RAM disk is not an installation procedure.
~ Author Unknown
Five years ago the Library of Congress began a project that collects every utterance on Twitter, in the name of preserving the nation's digital heritage. That is billions weekly, sucked up for storage in secure tape archives, and the Library has yet to figure out how to make any of it available to researchers. Divorced from a human curator, the unfiltered mass of Twitter may as well be a garbage heap [What Libraries Can (Still) Do, The New York Review Daily, October 26, 2015].
~ James Gleick
A "file" was originally—in sixteenth-century England—a wire on which slips and bills and notes and letters could be strung for preservation and reference. Then came file folders, file drawers, and file cabinets; then the electronic namesakes of all these; and the inevitable irony. Once a piece of information is filed, it is statistically unlikely ever to be seen again by human eyes.
~ James Gleick
It is important that carbon storage is carefully regulated, that the process is transparent to the public, and that there is a clear accounting of what happened to the CO2. This is particularly true of underground storage, where there is always a small chance that pressurized CO2 could escape.
~ Klaus Lackner
Houses are full of things that gather dust
~ Jack Kerouac