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Flutter is an open-source UI software development kit created by Google. It can be used to develop cross platform applications from a single codebase for the web, [3] Fuchsia, Android, iOS, Linux, macOS, and Windows. [4] First described in 2015, [5] [6] Flutter was released in May 2017.
The first version of fpGUI was written by Sebastian Günther back in 2000. The project was then abandoned in 2002. fpGUI was a successor to an earlier OO GTK wrapper, fpGTK, and was pretty much a fresh start to allow multiple (backend) widgetsets, most notably win32.
The first game to allow this level of interactivity between PC and console games (Dreamcast with specially produced keyboard and mouse) was Quake 3. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] Games that feature cross-platform online play include Rocket League , Final Fantasy XIV , Street Fighter V , Killer Instinct , Paragon and Fable Fortune , and Minecraft with its ...
"Heart flutter", an abnormally rapid heartbeat: Atrial flutter, a common abnormal heart rhythm; Ventricular flutter, a tachycardia affecting the ventricles with a rate over 250-350 beats/min; Flutter valve, a one-way valve used in respiratory medicine to prevent air from travelling back along a chest tube
GNUstep is a free software implementation of the Cocoa (formerly OpenStep) Objective-C frameworks, widget toolkit, and application development tools for Unix-like operating systems and Microsoft Windows.
Yoshi's Island DS, known in Japan as Yoshi Island DS, [a] is a 2006 platform game developed by Artoon and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS.It was released in North America and Australia in November 2006, in Europe in December 2006, and in Japan in March 2007. [1]
All Gas and Gaiters is a British television ecclesiastical sitcom which aired on BBC1 from 1966 to 1971. It was written by Pauline Devaney and Edwin Apps, a husband-and-wife team who used the pseudonym of John Wraith when writing the pilot.
The OpenSSL project was founded in 1998 to provide a free set of encryption tools for the code used on the Internet. It is based on a fork of SSLeay by Eric Andrew Young and Tim Hudson, which unofficially ended development on December 17, 1998, when Young and Hudson both went to work for RSA Security.