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Integer BASIC is a BASIC interpreter written by Steve Wozniak for the Apple I and Apple II computers. Originally available on cassette for the Apple I in 1976, then included in ROM on the Apple II from its release in 1977, it was the first version of BASIC used by many early home computer owners.
The first developer release of Rhapsody was released on October 13, 1997 (for Power Macintosh) [24] to 10,000 developers, who were given two CDs: the bootable Rhapsody installer, and another CD with sample source code (including a version of TextEdit in Java that calls Yellow Box APIs).
ASCII (/ ˈ æ s k iː / ⓘ ASS-kee), [3]: 6 an acronym for American Standard Code for Information Interchange, is a character encoding standard for electronic communication. . ASCII codes represent text in computers, telecommunications equipment, and other devic
XcodeGhost (and variant XcodeGhost S) are modified versions of Apple's Xcode development environment that are considered malware. [1] The software first gained widespread attention in September 2015, when a number of apps originating from China harbored the malicious code. [2]
San Francisco (also known as SF Pro) is a neo-grotesque typeface made by Apple Inc. It was first released to developers on November 18, 2014. [1] [2] It is the first new typeface designed at Apple in nearly twenty years and has been inspired by Helvetica and DIN.
The original intention was that this code might be used as part of some form of digital cash or micropayment scheme, as proposed, for example, by GNU Taler, [11] but that has not yet happened, and this code is not widely used. Google Developers API uses this status if a particular developer has exceeded the daily limit on requests. [12]
DR1 — Apple Rhapsody developer release 1; DR2 — Apple Rhapsody developer release 2; Dragon — Arch Linux 0.4; Dragon — Sun SPARCServer 2000; Dragon+ — Sun SPARCCenter 2000E; DragonHawk U+ 240 — HP-9000 K380/K580; Dublin — Sun Ultra Enterprise E150; Duo — an intel CPU core specification; Duracell — Sun PDB 1.2 on Ultra Enterprise 2
The data compression software for encoding into ALAC files, Apple Lossless Encoder, was introduced into the Mac OS X Core Audio framework on April 28, 2004, together with the QuickTime 6.5.1 update, thus making it available in iTunes since version 4.5 and above, and its replacement, the Music application. [8]