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Cairo — Microsoft Windows NT 4.0. Calais — Sun Next generation JavaStation. Calexico — Intel PRO/Wireless 2100B. Calistoga — Intel chipsets for Napa platforms. Calvin — Sun SPARCStation 2. Camaro — AMD Mobile Duron. Cambridge — Fedora Linux 10. Camelot — Sun product family name for Arthur, Excalibur, Morgan.
Pages in category "List of code names" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. F.
A code name, codename, call sign or cryptonym is a code word or name used, sometimes clandestinely, to refer to another name, word, project, or person. Code names are often used for military purposes, or in espionage. They may also be used in industrial counter-espionage to protect secret projects and the like from business rivals, or to give ...
Markiplier (real name: Mark Fischbach) hosts “Distractible” with two of his longtime friends: Wade Barnes (whom “I think I’ve known since the sixth grade,” Fischbach says) and Bob ...
Internet Explorer 1. Internet Explorer 1, first shipped in Microsoft Plus! for Windows 95: The codename O'Hare ties into the Chicago codename for Windows 95: O'Hare International Airport is the largest airport in the city of Chicago, Illinois — in Microsoft's words, "a point of departure to distant places from Chicago".
Somewhere in the US there is a city by that name. 2005 Eaglelake: Chipset Intel G41, G43, G45, P43, P45, Q43, and Q45 Express chipsets. The G and Q models have integrated GMA X4500 graphics. Successor to Bearlake. Eagle Lake is the name of many places in North America, including a town in Texas. 2007 Eagle Ridge Bus controller
For OS X releases beginning with 10.9, and for macOS releases, landmarks in California were used as public names. For OS X releases beginning with 10.11, and for macOS releases, varieties of apples were used as internal code names. Mac OS X: Cyan, Siam (in reference to joining Mac OS and Rhapsody) Mac OS X Developer Preview 3 – Bunsen
[citation needed] TRIGON, for example, was the code name for Aleksandr Ogorodnik, a member of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the former Soviet Union, whom the CIA developed as a spy; HERO was the code name for Col. Oleg Penkovsky, who supplied data on the nuclear readiness of the Soviet Union during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.