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B32 Software was the company that developed and supported B32 Business Basic, with the original site in Auckland, New Zealand, supplemented by a sales and support centre in Blue Ash, Ohio. The B32 interpreter was highly compatible with Data General Business Basic (DGBB), but it also enhanced and extended that language in many ways.
Industrial version of the IBM PC AT, tower form-factor 7532 Industrial Computer: 7532-041 May 1985: Unknown ISA, 16-bit 8 3 Intel 80286: 6 512 KB 1 MB Unknown Unknown Industrial version of the IBM PC AT, 19-inch rack-mountable form factor Industrial Computer 7552: 7552-040 October 1986: Unknown ISA, 16-bit MCA, 16-bit (undocumented)
This is a list of free and open-source software (FOSS) packages, computer software licensed under free software licenses and open-source licenses. Software that fits the Free Software Definition may be more appropriately called free software; the GNU project in particular objects to their works being referred to as open-source. [1]
H2 Database Engine – experimental since version 1.0.57 (2007-08-25) [10] HBase; HSQLDB – starting with version 2.0; IBM Netezza; Ingres [11] InterBase – all versions [12] LMDB [13] MariaDB (MySQL fork) – when used with XtraDB, an InnoDB fork and that is included in MariaDB sources and binaries [14] or PBXT [15] [16]
erwin Data Modeler (stylized as erwin but formerly as ERwin) is computer software for data modeling.Originally developed by Logic Works, erwin has since been acquired by a series of companies, before being spun-off by the private equity firm Parallax Capital Partners, which acquired and incorporated it as a separate entity, erwin, Inc., managed by CEO Adam Famularo.
Citadel – originally written for the CP/M operating system, had many forks for different systems under different names.; CONFER – CONFER II [citation needed] on the MTS, CONFER U on Unix and CONFER V on VAX/VMS, written by Robert Parnes starting in 1975.
FME, also known as Feature Manipulation Engine, is a geospatial extract, transformation and load software platform developed and maintained by Safe Software of British Columbia, Canada. [4] FME was first released in 1996, and evolved out of a successful bid by the founders of Safe Software, Don Murray and Dale Lutz, for a Canadian Government ...
An "unlimited number of licenses" runtime version was offered, allowing developers to sell applications and include the run-time R:Base engine. Example of an R:Base 3.1 command prompt transaction asking the application to list the structure of a database table of California cities, (CALIFCY): [citation needed]