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  2. 3960X - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3960X

    Intel Core i7-3960X, computer processor released in 2011 Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination.

  3. Canon Production Printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_Production_Printing

    Canon Production Printing, known as Océ until the end of 2019, [2] is a Netherlands-based subset of Canon that develops, manufactures and sells printing and copying hardware and related software. The product line includes office printing and copying machinery, production printers, and wide-format printers for both technical documentation and ...

  4. MacBook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacBook

    As part of the Mac transition to Intel processors, Apple released a 13-inch laptop simply named "MacBook", as a successor to the PowerPC-based iBook series of laptops. . During its existence, it was the most affordable Mac, serving as the entry-level laptop that was less expensive than the rest of the Mac laptop lineup (the MacBook Pro portable workstation, and later the MacBook Air ultra-port

  5. Mac App Store - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_App_Store

    The Mac App Store (also known as the App Store) is a digital distribution platform for macOS apps, often referred to as Mac apps, [1] created and maintained by Apple. The platform was announced on October 20, 2010, at Apple's "Back to the Mac" event.

  6. Canon Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_Inc.

    Canon Inc. (Japanese: キヤノン株式会社; [note 1] Hepburn: Kyanon kabushiki gaisha) is a Japanese multinational corporation headquartered in Ōta, Tokyo, specializing in optical, imaging, and industrial products, such as lenses, cameras, medical equipment, scanners, printers, and semiconductor manufacturing equipment.

  7. MacPaint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacPaint

    MacPaint is a raster graphics editor developed by Apple Computer and released with the original Macintosh personal computer on January 24, 1984. [2] It was sold separately for US$195 with its word processing counterpart, MacWrite. [3]

  8. x86-64 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86-64

    AMD64 (also variously referred to by AMD in their literature and documentation as “AMD 64-bit Technology” and “AMD x86-64 Architecture”) was created as an alternative to the radically different IA-64 architecture designed by Intel and Hewlett-Packard, which was backward-incompatible with IA-32, the 32-bit version of the x86 architecture.

  9. Multiply–accumulate operation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiply–accumulate...

    The MAC operation modifies an accumulator a: + () When done with floating-point numbers, it might be performed with two roundings (typical in many DSPs ), or with a single rounding. When performed with a single rounding, it is called a fused multiply–add ( FMA ) or fused multiply–accumulate ( FMAC ).