Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
This image is believed to be non-free or possibly non-free in its home country, the United Kingdom. In order for Commons to host a file, it must be free in its home country and in the United States. Some countries, particularly other countries based on common law, have a lower threshold of originality than the United States.
English: This is the official Atari Jaguar logo that was used for official packaging. I did center the characters in "64 bit" to their respective circles as they were noticeably off imo.
To place a file in this category, add the tag {{Non-free video game screenshot|Atari Jaguar}} to the Licensing section of the file's description page. If you are not sure which category a file belongs to, browse Category:Screenshots of video games or request assistance from Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Video games .
The Jaguar XJ (X351) is a saloon car built by British manufacturer Jaguar Cars, later known as Jaguar Land Rover, from 2010 to 2019. It is the fourth-generation of the Jaguar XJ model. Referred to internally within Jaguar as the X351, it was announced in 2009 before going on sale in 2010, and combines revised styling with underpinnings of the ...
Mac OS X Jaguar (version 10.2) is the third major release of macOS, Apple's desktop and server operating system. It superseded Mac OS X 10.1 and preceded Mac OS X Panther . The operating system was released on August 23, 2002.
Gerard Gabriel McGovern OBE (born 1956 in Coventry) is a British car designer and the Chief Creative Officer for Jaguar Land Rover [1] leading the Group’s Design Studio at Gaydon, Warwickshire, [2] creating concepts and new models. A strong advocate of design's relevance to brand equity, he is a member of the Jaguar Land Rover board of ...
Anti-virus programmers set the EICAR string as a verified virus, similar to other identified signatures. A compliant virus scanner, when detecting the file, will respond in more or less the same manner as if it found a harmful virus. Not all virus scanners are compliant, and may not detect the file even when they are correctly configured.