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Slipstream (computer science), the technique of running a shortened program concurrently and ahead of the execution of the full program Slipstream (computing), a slang term for merging patches or updates into the original installation sources of a program
A slipstream processor is an architecture designed to reduce the length of a running program by removing the non-essential instructions. It is a form of speculative computing . Non-essential instructions include such things as results that are not written to memory, or compare operations that will always return true.
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Zammis Clark (born 1994 [1]), also known as wack0, Slipstream or Raylee, is a British computer security specialist and former employee of Malwarebytes.Clark is suspected to have hacked numerous large entities, including VTech, Nintendo, Microsoft, [2] and North Korea, [3] leaking Version 3.0 of its Red Star Operating System.
A slipstream is a region behind a moving object in which a wake of fluid (typically air or water) is moving at velocities comparable to that of the moving object, relative to the ambient fluid through which the object is moving. [1] The term slipstream also applies to the similar region adjacent to an object with a fluid moving around it.
Welcome to the world of Crysis 3, a deep jungle experience awaits you in the Dystopian New York setting as you battle through hordes of CELL operatives and search for the evasive Alpha Ceph...
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