Inertia in a sentence as a noun

You came up with your go-to brand, then you just stuck with it because of inertia.

There is not some kind of evil, inherent inertia at work that all people must fight against.

They continue to use it purely because of inertia and lock in.

The DoJ suit in 1997 was a serious blow to Microsoft inertia.

It turned out that this phenomenon was called "sleep inertia.

Social networks have a lot of inertia for users who aren't early adopters.

They want to see the Linux desktop improve, and even if people fight against them and they lose, to me it feels better than the inertia of the status quo. Stasis gets no one anywhere.

They are completely dependent on the psychological inertia of their users, which I wouldn't bet on long term.

All they have is inertia, deep political connections, and a century of regulatory mazes.

Trackballs offer the added tactile benefits of inertia and operating on an infinite substrate.- Dials, wheels.

Maybe it's a good thing that Google and others are finally straight-up bent on filtering nerds like me out of their customer base, maybe that's the kick needed to overcome inertia and complacency.

From a preliminary investigation into Julia it had less lib support, but most importantly, less inertia.

Since the majority of websites even today work relatively well in IE[6-8], the inconvenience of occasional breakage does not outweigh the inertia of IE[6-8] users.

Pretend that $500k had been allocated to produce a list of plain text passwords and a combination of bureaucratic inertia, competence issues, and internal politics made that requirement an unstoppable freight train.

Inertia definitions

noun

a disposition to remain inactive or inert; "he had to overcome his inertia and get back to work"

See also: inactiveness inactivity

noun

(physics) the tendency of a body to maintain its state of rest or uniform motion unless acted upon by an external force