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Lists of code names (1 C, 8 P) P. Project Plowshare (2 C, 1 P) R. Rainbow code (54 P) Pages in category "Code names"
Wolfdale — code name for a processor from Intel; Wolverine — Red Hat Linux 7.0.91; Wombat — Arch Linux 0.7-beta1; Wombat 33 — Apple Macintosh Quadra 800; Wonderboy — Trustix Secure Linux 2.2-beta1; Woodcrest — Intel Xeon 5100 series processors; Woody — Debian GNU/Linux 3.0; Wren4 — Seagate 4.2 GB 1.6" 5400 rpm disk
Named after the chemical element in the periodic table. [77] Iron 21H1 Windows Server 2022 [b] Named after the chemical element in the periodic table. [78] Cobalt 21H2 Windows 11: Named after the chemical element in the periodic table. Nickel 22H2 Windows 11 2022 Update Named after the chemical element in the periodic table. Originally planned ...
In December 2018, Google announced that it would retire Fusion Tables on 3 December 2019. [12] An open-source archive tool was created to export existing Fusion Tables maps to an open-sourced visualizer. [13] Fusion Tables had an avid following that was disappointed to learn of the deprecation. [14] [15]
Logo of Saluc S.A. Saluc S.A. is a Belgian speciality manufacturing company. Founded in 1923, they are best known for their Aramith brand billiard balls.The company also manufactures other sorts of balls and bearings with high engineering tolerances for a wide variety of industrial and consumer-product applications, such as Logitech trackballs.
For OS X releases beginning with 10.9, and for macOS releases, landmarks in California were used as public names. [95] For OS X releases beginning with 10.11, and for macOS releases, varieties of apples were used as internal code names. [94] Mac OS X: Cyan, Siam (in reference to joining Mac OS and Rhapsody) [91] Mac OS X Developer Preview 3 ...
A sortable table (demonstrated in the first section), organized under subheadings or just a giant table A bulleted list, organized under subheadings The way this page was when created , with a ToC at the top and an alphabetical list of codenames (I like this one a lot, though some products have multiple codenames so that might be a bad idea)
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