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The iPad (8th generation) [3] (also referred to as the iPad 10.2-inch [4]) is a tablet computer developed and marketed by Apple Inc. as the successor to the 7th-generation iPad. It was announced on September 15, 2020 and released on September 18, 2020.
The HASL module 10 Red Factories (RF) was published in January 2019, designed by Charles Kibler. It incorporates a reprinting of Red Barricades (HASL 1) together with a new 'sister' module Red October (which apparently may become available separately). Red October covers fighting at the adjacent 'Krasny Oktyabr' factory complex in Stalingrad in ...
Like the iPad Air, it has a 10.9-inch 2360x1640 Liquid Retina display; an increase from the previous 10.2-inch model, but it is not laminated. [7] The tenth-generation iPad uses an A14 Bionic processor, previously seen in the fourth-generation iPad Air and the iPhone 12 in 2020. The chip has a 6-core CPU, a 4-core GPU, and a 16-core Neural Engine.
This is a list of notable games and applications available or in development for iOS, the operating system of the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. There are currently 323 games on this list. Games and applications
The equivalent UIC classification is refined to (1′E)E1′ for Mallet locomotives. All 2-10-10-2 locomotives have been articulated locomotives of the Mallet type. This wheel arrangement was rare. Only two classes of 2-10-10-2 locomotives have been built: the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway's 3000 class, and the Virginian Railway's class ...
Both the iPad Pro 2nd Generation 12.9 and iPad Pro 10.5 supported 8 versions of iOS/iPadOS. These included iOS 10, iOS 11, iOS 12, iPadOS 13, iPadOS 14, iPadOS 15, iPadOS 16, and iPadOS 17. At WWDC 2024, it was announced that it would not support iPadOS 18 despite having superior hardware to some models supporting the new update. [6]
The first edition was released in January 2007 by Forge World, [1] a division of the British gaming company Games Workshop. The second edition, a relaunch via Games Workshop, was released in August 2019 with a different ruleset and new, larger models. [2]
It was similar to, and probably derived from, the pilum used by the Roman army and had a barbed head and long narrow socket or shank made of iron mounted on a wooden haft. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was rare on the battlefield, [ 4 ] despite the claim by the Greek historian Agathias , [ 5 ] being found mostly in the grave goods of the wealthy. [ 4 ]