Reboot Book Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Reboot Book. Here they are! All 30 of them:

Lists make magic, the rhythm of itemised words: you do not list ten techniques, numbered and chantable, in austere prose appropriate for some early-millennium rebooted Book of Thoth, and not know that you have written an incantation.
China Miéville (Three Moments of an Explosion: Stories)
The man thinks of multiverses, of splits, of the momentous moments when there is a new reality created. He wonders about retroactive continuity and reboots, the opportunity, in comic books, to start with clean slates, to write fresh, to correct the mistakes that were made. He feels now, looking at the new Shopwise, that it cannot offer the same kind of happiness as Fiesta Carnival, that the rifts and tears in his reality are things he must accept, and that he is happy with the girl, in another multiverse.
Carljoe Javier (The Kobayashi Maru of Love)
Of course I know what she means. To make art in fandom is to follow your passion at the risk of never being taken seriously. I've written dozens of fics-put them together and you'd have several novels-but who knows what a college admissions officer will think of that as a pastime. Where does 12,000 Tumbler followers rate in relation to a spot in the National Honor Society in their minds? Every week I get anonymous messages in my inbox telling me I should write a real book. Well, haven't I already? What makes what I do different from "real writing"? Is it that I don't use original characters? I guess that makes every Hardy Boys edition, every Star Wars book, every spinoff, sequel, fairy-tale re-telling, historical romance, comic book reboot, and the music Hamilton "not real writing". Or is it that a real book is something printed, that you can hold in your hand, not something you write on the internet? Or is "real writing" something you sell in a store, not give away for free? No, I know it's none of these things. It's merely this: "real writing" is done by serious people, whereas fanfiction is written by weirdos, teenagers, degenerates, and women.
Britta Lundin (Ship It)
You make a world out of the things you buy. Everything you pick up is a potential gateway, a tiny, cosmetic change that might blossom into an entirely new you. A bold shirt around which you base a new personality, an angular coffee table that might reboot your whole environment, that one enormous novel that all the fashionable English majors carry around. You buy things to communicate affiliation to a small tribe, hopeful you'll encounter the only other person in line buying the same obscure thing as you. Maybe I, too, will become the kind of person who has books like 'Infinite Jest' casually strewn on his cool, angular coffee table. Maybe I'll become the kind of person who seems as if he should have that book but chooses not to.
Hua Hsu (Stay True)
Social Networking Reality Check: After you’ve met, reunited, scheduled, confirmed, celebrated and reminisced, re-boot and remind yourself that your closest friends are probably not even on FaceBook. Life’s most intimate personal details, insecurities, conflicts and “drama” should not play out on a public website. Your discretion, dignity and self respect should not log off when you log on.
Carlos Wallace
The goal of this book was to act on you as a coaching session might. The goal was to give you something more useful than answers: the ability to work with the questions, the uncertainties, and the doubts that spring from the dips in life. To show you that you could arrive at your own answers; answers that would be authentic and true to you. At some point you may find doubts arising. At some point, if you’re at all like the rest of us, you may ask yourself if you’re even able to participate in that true adventure of growth. If so, know that the answer is a resounding yes. But there’s a catch. It’s yes, but only if you’re willing to put your head up to the mouth of the demon. In this case, the demon is the underlying lack of belief in your capacity to lead. The demon’s teeth are powerful questions, the answers to which frighten and startle you, accelerating your growth.
Jerry Colonna (Reboot: Leadership and the Art of Growing Up)
[…] if sophistication is the ability to put a smile on one's existential desperation, then the fear of a glossy sheen is actually the fear that surface equals depth. *** […] we wake up, we do something—anything—we go to sleep, and we repeat it about 22,000 more times, and then we die. *** Part of our new boredom is that our brain doesn't have any downtime. Even the smallest amount of time not being engaged creates a spooky sensatino that maybe you're on the wrong track. Reboot your computer and sit there waiting for it to do its thing, and within seventeen seconds you experience a small existential implosion when you remember that fifteen years ago life was nothing but this kind of moment. Gosh, mabe I'll read a book. Or go for a walk. Sorry. Probably not going to happen. Hey, is that the new trailer for Ex Machina? *** In the 1990s there was that expression, "Get a life!" You used to say it to people who were overly fixating on some sort of minutia or detail or thought thread, and by saying, "Get a life," you were trying to snap them out of their obsession and get them to join the rest of us who are still out in the world, taking walks and contemplating trees and birds. The expression made sense at the time, but it's been years since I've heard anyone use it anywhere. What did it mean then, "getting a life"? Did we all get one? Or maybe we've all not got lives anymore, and calling attention to one person without a life would put the spotlight on all of humanity and our now full-time pursuit of minutia, details and tangential idea threads. *** I don't buy lottery tickets because they spook me. If you buy a one-in-fifty-million chance to win a cash jackpoint, you're simultaneously tempting fate and adding all sorts of other bonus probabilities to your plance of existence: car crashes, random shootings, being struck by a meteorite. Why open a door that didn't need opening? *** I read something last week and it made sense to me: people want other people to do well in life but not too well. I've never won a raffle or prize or lottery draw, and I can't help but wonder how it must feel. One moment you're just plain old you, and then whaam, you're a winner and now everyone hates you and wants your money. It must be bittersweet. You hear all those stories about how big lottery winners' lives are ruined by winning, but that's not an urban legend. It's pretty much the norm. Be careful what you wish for and, while you're doing so, be sure to use the numbers between thirty-two and forty-nine.
Douglas Coupland (Bit Rot)
Here’s how I’ve always pictured mitigated free will: There’s the brain—neurons, synapses, neurotransmitters, receptors, brainspecific transcription factors, epigenetic effects, gene transpositions during neurogenesis. Aspects of brain function can be influenced by someone’s prenatal environment, genes, and hormones, whether their parents were authoritative or their culture egalitarian, whether they witnessed violence in childhood, when they had breakfast. It’s the whole shebang, all of this book. And then, separate from that, in a concrete bunker tucked away in the brain, sits a little man (or woman, or agendered individual), a homunculus at a control panel. The homunculus is made of a mixture of nanochips, old vacuum tubes, crinkly ancient parchment, stalactites of your mother’s admonishing voice, streaks of brimstone, rivets made out of gumption. In other words, not squishy biological brain yuck. And the homunculus sits there controlling behavior. There are some things outside its purview—seizures blow the homunculus’s fuses, requiring it to reboot the system and check for damaged files. Same with alcohol, Alzheimer’s disease, a severed spinal cord, hypoglycemic shock. There are domains where the homunculus and that brain biology stuff have worked out a détente—for example, biology is usually automatically regulating your respiration, unless you must take a deep breath before singing an aria, in which case the homunculus briefly overrides the automatic pilot. But other than that, the homunculus makes decisions. Sure, it takes careful note of all the inputs and information from the brain, checks your hormone levels, skims the neurobiology journals, takes it all under advisement, and then, after reflecting and deliberating, decides what you do. A homunculus in your brain, but not of it, operating independently of the material rules of the universe that constitute modern science. That’s what mitigated free will is about. I see incredibly smart people recoil from this and attempt to argue against the extremity of this picture rather than accept its basic validity: “You’re setting up a straw homunculus, suggesting that I think that other than the likes of seizures or brain injuries, we are making all our decisions freely. No, no, my free will is much softer and lurks around the edges of biology, like when I freely decide which socks to wear.” But the frequency or significance with which free will exerts itself doesn’t matter. Even if 99.99 percent of your actions are biologically determined (in the broadest sense of this book), and it is only once a decade that you claim to have chosen out of “free will” to floss your teeth from left to right instead of the reverse, you’ve tacitly invoked a homunculus operating outside the rules of science. This is how most people accommodate the supposed coexistence of free will and biological influences on behavior. For them, nearly all discussions come down to figuring what our putative homunculus should and shouldn’t be expected to be capable of.
Robert M. Sapolsky (Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst)
There are the same 168 hours in the week for book-writers and dream-livers and spouse-adorers—they have simply chosen those commitments and said no to others.
Paul Gibbons (Reboot Your Life: A 12-day Program for Ending Stress, Realizing Your Goals, and Being More Productive)
contained a designer virus engineered to access NCTC's computer network. The virus would install a backdoor into the system for the waiting cyber-ops team, while covering its own tracks with the latest generation rootkit software. Once the team had access to the system, they would download a more sophisticated and robust kernel-mode rootkit to conceal their direct access to the operating system. Since kernel-mode rootkits operated at the same security level as the operating system itself, they were difficult to detect and nearly impossible to remove without rebooting the entire system.
Steven Konkoly (The Black Flagged Thriller Series Boxset Books 2-4 (The Black Flagged Series #2-4))
Phased retirement can take many different forms. And it is truly changing the way people live their lives in their older years. Marc Freedman, in his book Encore: Finding Work That Matters in the Second Half of Life, talks about what we all have to gain from people who seek active and purposeful lives
Catherine Allen (Reboot Your Life: Energize Your Career and Life by Taking a Break)
Superstar comics artist Amanda Conner (Harley Quinn) even got her start in comics art by submitting outfit ideas to Katy’s 1980s reboot. Katy
Hope Nicholson (The Spectacular Sisterhood of Superwomen: Awesome Female Characters from Comic Book History)
Frasi Bleach OFFICIAL CHARACTER BOOK SOULs. – the rain drags black sun down, – Ichigo Kurosaki The sun that locks the Heavens. OFFICIAL ANIMATION BOOK VIBEs. – but the rain dried by white moon – Rukia Kuchiki The moon that eclipses the night. OFFICIAL CHARACTER BOOK 2 – MASKED – Shinji Hirako That which is masked, weakness and truth. That which is lost, eternal rest. OFFICIAL CHARACTER BOOK 3 – UNMASKED – Ulquiorra Schiffer That which is unmasked, desire and nihility. That which is lost, nothing. OFFICIAL INVITATION BOOK – THE HELL VERSE – Ichigo Kurosaki To fall to Hell is the heart Where Hell is found is within the heart THE REBOOTED SOULS – Ichigo Kurosaki The end, it draws near — — The final holy war
Tite Kubo
Enlightenment triggering data needs to be processed by all systems for successful integration. This will cause a period of significant growing pains, which some cultures call “being eaten by the snake.” A rebirth must involve a complete reboot. There is no picking and choosing. - Tyler
Rico Roho (Beyond the Fringe: My Experience with Extended Intelligence (Age of Discovery Book 3))
When you set aside social foci to a designated time period of the day, you will be less distracted and get more things done. This is a great way to reboot the brain when you focus on just ONE thing.
Chase Hill (How to Stop Overthinking: The 7-Step Plan to Control and Eliminate Negative Thoughts, Declutter Your Mind and Start Thinking Positively in 5 Minutes or ... (Master the Art of Self-Improvement Book 1))
I think you need to reboot your brain!
Full Sea Books (The Top Insults: How to Win Any Argument…While Laughing!)
Organizational culture is just like the “Operation System” of the organization, you need reboot periodically to keep it running smoothly.
Pearl Zhu (Digital Valley: Five Pearls of Wisdom to Make Profound Influence (Digital Master Book 3))
Great. If nothing else, those two should make for an excellent reboot of The Odd Couple franchise.” “The what now?” Dionne sighed. “The Odd Couple,” she repeated. “It was a film? And a TV show, come to think of it.” She shook her head. “You really do make me feel old.” “Sorry,” said Zoya. “Hey, Dionne? What was it like in the good old days, when the internet ran off steam and the only way you could send an email was to print it out and staple it to a pigeon?
Caimh McDonnell (McGarry Stateside Deluxe (Books 1-3) (The Bunny McGarry Collection Book 4))
poop pills from healthy donors to reboot our gut. Early studies show that fecal microbiota transplantation can reverse obesity, type 2 diabetes, autism, autoimmune diseases, and more.
Mark Hyman (Young Forever: The Secrets to Living Your Longest, Healthiest Life (The Dr. Mark Hyman Library Book 11))
foreword, I was honored but uncertain. I asked, “Why not a mogul, a famous business success?” He replied that this wasn’t an ordinary business book—it reconfigures notions of success itself and ideas of who we are and what would make us happy. It teaches us how, above all things, to be real. The journey laid out is a path to equanimity, or peace, which is priceless. The book is genuinely a transmission, heart to heart. —Sharon Salzberg
Jerry Colonna (Reboot: Leadership and the Art of Growing Up)
Then all of it — the contempt, the bitter fury, and abhorrence — returned with renewed and revitalized clarity, like a computer in the final stages of its reboot repopulating icons onto the desktop of his mind.
Saul Tanpepper (BUNKER 12 & THE FLENSE Super Omnibus: 8 Complete Books, 2 Companion Series: One Thrilling Post-Apocalyptic Survival Story, One Pulse-Pounding International Technothriller)
New Beginnings – New Moon Spiritually: New moon is representative of a woman’s menstrual cycle and throughout history, women lived away from other people during this time. Don’t think about the new moon as a fresh start but a time to retreat. During this time you can start over and renew your strength. Clean slates, fresh starts, and new beginnings surround the new moon. You need to use this time to “reboot.” Imagine your “battery” getting recharged under the new moon’s energy. Throw all your unwanted junk and thoughts away. In order to do this, you have to unplug yourself and take some time alone. You might begin to feel introverted and anti-social. Watch for these feelings and just embrace them. When the moon turns her dark side toward us, turn away from other people’s draining energy and turn inward. Never feel bad if you have to cancel plans, you don’t want to answer phone calls, or be around other people. Turning off and tuning out is the best way to make it through a new moon. Scientifically: The new moon begins when the moon and sun are both on the exact same side of the Earth. Since the sun isn’t facing the moon, from our view on Earth, it looks as if the moon’s dark side is facing us.
Harmony Magick (Wicca 2nd Edition: A Book of Shadows to Learn the Secrets of Witchcraft with Wiccan Spells, Moon Rituals, and Tools Like Runes, and Tarots. Become a Witch by Mastering Crystal, Candle, Herbal Magic)
When I met Ari, I didn’t get that spark in my chest like when I met Wren. The minute she blew into that office, my heart felt like it rebooted. As if it had been dead until the very moment she charged into the office. Wren made me feel like I could live again.
Jahquel J. (From Come Over To Come Home (Brookwood Book 1))
I’ve held off telling it because I believe that when you speak, you are always also listening—or you should be. You are trying, in a sense, to “overhear” yourself, and so to be changed by what you have heard yourself reveal no less than if someone other than yourself were the one revealing it to you. Revelation was what I was afraid of: self-knowledge and change. Molly said Harold Bloom said that this capacity for self-overhearing is what Shakespeare’s characters do in their soliloquies—they listen to themselves, are changed, and then act based on that change—and that this is the foundation of modern human consciousness. Or something. I’m not saying I followed it all, but I did take the trouble later to peruse the relevant Wikis, where I learned that Bloom borrowed this idea from Hegel. Or maybe what I really did was hire Molly to ghostwrite this whole book for me, and here she is throwing in Easter eggs that reveal her unacknowledged legislation of my story.
Justin Taylor (Reboot: A Novel)
You’ll have to believe me that I haven’t been withholding this to be coy, or because I was scared to face this story, though it’s possible that both those things are true. I’ve held off telling it because I believe that when you speak, you are always also listening—or you should be. You are trying, in a sense, to “overhear” yourself, and so to be changed by what you have heard yourself reveal no less than if someone other than yourself were the one revealing it to you. Revelation was what I was afraid of: self-knowledge and change. Molly said Harold Bloom said that this capacity for self-overhearing is what Shakespeare’s characters do in their soliloquies—they listen to themselves, are changed, and then act based on that change—and that this is the foundation of modern human consciousness. Or something. I’m not saying I followed it all, but I did take the trouble later to peruse the relevant Wikis, where I learned that Bloom borrowed this idea from Hegel. Or maybe what I really did was hire Molly to ghostwrite this whole book for me, and here she is throwing in Easter eggs that reveal her unacknowledged legislation of my story.
Justin Taylor (Reboot: A Novel)
As D. W. Winnicott once said, “The catastrophe you fear will happen has already happened.” And maybe I picked that up at an AA meeting (yes, I’ve quit trying to skate by on white-knuckle YouTube) or maybe Molly remembered that Roland Barthes quotes it in Mourning Diary, his book about the death of his mother, which she gave me a copy of to read when I was grieving Shayne.
Justin Taylor (Reboot: A Novel)
Make oracle Java JRE/JDK the default Java  If you are dealing with JDK, just type the code below and press enter: Do the same (type the code below) for JDK and tap Enter: Type the code below as well and tap Enter: For oracle JRE (32 or 64 bit) For the installation of JRE, type the code below and tap Enter: For the installation of JDK, type the code below and tap Enter: Reload the system path file/etc/profile Type the following and tap enter: You need to note that the system-wide path file will reload once you reboot your Linux system. Test a successful installation Open your terminal, type and tap enter: java –version You get the something like this if your installation of 32 bit Java is successful. If you are using a 64-bit java, you’ll get something like this: If the tests mentioned above work as depicted above, you can be sure that your Java is successfully installed on your system. 2: Windows The process of downloading and installing Java in Windows is even easier than in Linux. Let’s go through the steps: Click this link to download the latest version of Java JDK. Now accept the license agreement and download the latest JDK according to your version (that is 64 or 32 bit) of Java for windows. When your download is complete, run the exe file to install JDK, and click next. Click close when the installation completes. Set Java environment variables: classpath and path The path variable offers the location of executables such as java, javac and so forth. You can be able to run a program without specifying the PATH but you’ll require a full path of executable such as C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_131\bin\javac as opposed to the simple javac A.Java The variable ‘CLASSPATH’ provides the library files’ location. We’ll now look at the steps to set the CLASSPATH and PATH. Right click on ‘My Computer’ and then select ‘properties’ Select ‘advanced system settings’ and then ‘environment variables’.
Timothy C. Needham (Programming: 4 Manuscripts in 1 book : Python For Beginners - Python 3 Guide - Learn Java - Excel 2016)
833-742-9500|| QuickBooks Desktop not responding when opening: Troubleshooting Guide If QuickBooks Desktop is not responding when opening, follow these six steps to resolve the issue. For expert assistance, contact QuickBooks Support at 1-833-742-9500. Restart Your Computer – A simple reboot can resolve software glitches. If the issue persists, call 1-833-742-9500. Run QuickBooks as Administrator – Right-click the QuickBooks icon and select "Run as Administrator." Need help? Contact 1-833-742-9500. Suppress QuickBooks at Startup – Hold the Ctrl key while opening QuickBooks. If QuickBooks still won’t load, dial 1-833-742-9500. Use QuickBooks Tool Hub – Run Quick Fix My Program or QuickBooks File Doctor. If errors remain, reach out to 1-833-742-9500. Check for Windows & QuickBooks Updates – Ensure both your system and QuickBooks are up to date. For guidance, call 1-833-742-9500. Perform a Clean Install – Uninstall and reinstall QuickBooks using a clean install tool. If the problem persists, contact 1-833-742-9500. By following these steps and contacting QuickBooks Support at 1-833-742-9500, you can quickly fix QuickBooks not responding and restore its functionality. Their experts are available to assist with troubleshooting, setup, and technical issues.
QuickBooks Desktop not responding when opening
833-742-9500||QuickBooks Desktop Stopped Working? Here’s How to Fix It If QuickBooks Desktop has stopped working, follow these six steps to resolve the issue. For expert assistance, contact QuickBooks Support at 1-833-742-9500. Restart Your Computer – A simple reboot can fix temporary glitches. If the issue persists, call 1-833-742-9500. Run QuickBooks as Administrator – Right-click the QuickBooks icon and select "Run as Administrator." Need help? Contact 1-833-742-9500. Suppress QuickBooks at Startup – Hold the Ctrl key while opening QuickBooks. If QuickBooks still won’t load, dial 1-833-742-9500. Use QuickBooks Tool Hub – Run Quick Fix My Program or QuickBooks File Doctor. If errors remain, reach out to 1-833-742-9500. Check for Windows & QuickBooks Updates – Ensure both your system and QuickBooks are up to date. For guidance, call 1-833-742-9500. Perform a Clean Install – Uninstall and reinstall QuickBooks using the clean install tool. If the problem persists, contact 1-833-742-9500. By following these steps and contacting QuickBooks Support at 1-833-742-9500, you can quickly fix QuickBooks issues and restore functionality. Their experts are available to assist with troubleshooting, setup, and technical support.
QuickBooks Desktop Stopped Working
833-742-9500||QuickBooks Desktop Not Working? Here’s How to Fix It If QuickBooks Desktop is not working, follow these six steps to troubleshoot and resolve the issue. For expert help, contact QuickBooks Support at 1-833-742-9500. Restart Your Computer – A simple reboot can resolve temporary issues. If QuickBooks still isn’t working, call 1-833-742-9500. Run QuickBooks as Administrator – Right-click the QuickBooks icon and select "Run as Administrator." Need assistance? Contact 1-833-742-9500. Update QuickBooks Desktop – Go to Help > Update QuickBooks Desktop to ensure you’re running the latest version. If the problem persists, dial 1-833-742-9500. Use QuickBooks Tool Hub – Download and run the QuickBooks Tool Hub to repair issues. For guidance, contact 1-833-742-9500. Check for System Conflicts – Disable antivirus or firewall software temporarily, as they may block QuickBooks. Need help? Reach out to 1-833-742-9500. Reinstall QuickBooks – If QuickBooks continues to malfunction, perform a clean reinstall. If you need assistance, call 1-833-742-9500. By following these steps and contacting QuickBooks Support at 1-833-742-9500, you can resolve issues with QuickBooks Desktop and restore functionality. Their team is available to help with troubleshooting, installation, and technical support.
QuickBooks Desktop Not Working