Boot in a sentence as a noun

And it's understaffed open source software to boot.

You definitely didn't boot him off the site, and in fact gave him a top spot in your system.

" I had done a lot to develop my talents and knowledge base, and in a range of areas to boot.

Yes, now my VirtualBox image is corrupted and won't boot anymore.

May press conference was already queued up as the SparcStation 20 / Firewall-One launch event, the SS20 got the boot and they replaced it with the Java 'launch'.

Moving to x86 also increased the features of Macs, allowing them to dual-boot Windows and efficiently virtualize other x86-based OSes.

Boot in a sentence as a verb

Let's just collectively decide that users with secure boot enabled will be prevented from running any module not shipped by the os vendor.

These are supposed to be discrete, semantically meaningful boot levels that you could purposely initiate: boot to runlevel 1, boot to runlevel 2, drop back to runlevel 1.

I remember one interview where I flatly failed the ``technical portion" and had over-estimated my competence to boot, demonstrating that I didn't even know what I didn't know.

Using these 1 GB pages for the contents of a file is a bit tricky, since they need to be allocated off the hugetlbfs filesystem that does not allow writes and requires that the pages be allocated at boot time.

Heres an example video:"-------"The standard gestures dont help, requiring many in-from-the-edge swipes that not only arent discoverable""After waiting over a minute for the machine to boot and launch the mail app, I got a blank gradient screen.

Boot definitions

noun

footwear that covers the whole foot and lower leg

noun

British term for the luggage compartment in a car

noun

the swift release of a store of affective force; "they got a great bang out of it"; "what a boot!"; "he got a quick rush from injecting heroin"; "he does it for kicks"

See also: bang charge rush flush thrill kick

noun

protective casing for something that resembles a leg

noun

an instrument of torture that is used to heat or crush the foot and leg

noun

a form of foot torture in which the feet are encased in iron and slowly crushed

noun

the act of delivering a blow with the foot; "he gave the ball a powerful kick"; "the team's kicking was excellent"

See also: kick kicking

verb

kick; give a boot to

verb

cause to load (an operating system) and start the initial processes; "boot your computer"

See also: reboot