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  2. Cookie (Japanese magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie_(Japanese_magazine)

    Cookie (クッキー, Kukkī) is a Japanese shōjo manga magazine published bi-monthly by Shueisha, with issues released on the 26th of odd-numbered months. [2] It launched in 2000; a simultaneously published digital edition of the magazine is also available as of 2015.

  3. Naenara (browser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naenara_(browser)

    Naenara is a North Korean intranet web browser software developed by the Korea Computer Center for use of the national Kwangmyong intranet. It is developed from a version of Mozilla Firefox and is distributed with the Linux-based operating system Red Star OS that North Korea developed due to licensing and security issues with Microsoft Windows.

  4. ExpressVPN - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExpressVPN

    ExpressVPN was founded in 2009 by Peter Burchhardt and Dan Pomerantz, two serial entrepreneurs who were also Wharton School alumni. [6]In July 2017, ExpressVPN announced in an open letter and later a public statement by Apple, that Apple had removed all VPN apps from its App Store in China, a revelation that was later picked up by The New York Times and other news outlets.

  5. Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunder_Run_(Kentucky_Kingdom)

    Thunder Run is a wooden roller coaster at the Kentucky Kingdom amusement park in Louisville, Kentucky. The ride originally operated from August 1990 through to October 2009, when then-operators Six Flags abandoned the park. After remaining closed since 2009, Thunder Run reopened in May 2014 when Kentucky Kingdom reopened under new operators.

  6. Yoshi's Cookie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshi's_Cookie

    Yoshi's Cookie originally began development as an arcade game called Hermetica (ヘルメティカ, Herumetika), which was being produced by game developer Home Data. [citation needed] The arcade game did poorly at the location test, so Home Data sold the Hermetica rights to Bullet-Proof Software.

  7. Kairosoft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kairosoft

    Kairosoft was founded as a dōjin games developer in 1996, and is currently located in the Nishi-Shinjuku district of Tokyo with only nine employees. They started out developing simulation games for the Windows platform, the first of which was released in 1996 and simulated a used bookstore, and another example was the original Game Dev Story released in 1997, with a sequel released in 2001. [3]

  8. Homestead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestead

    Homestead (building), a farmhouse and its adjacent outbuildings; by extension, it can mean any small cluster of houses Homestead (unit), a unit of measurement equal to 160 acres

  9. Dinosaur Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_Game

    The Dinosaur Game [1] (also known as the Chrome Dino) [2] is a browser game developed by Google and built into the Google Chrome web browser. The player guides a pixelated t-rex across a side-scrolling landscape, avoiding obstacles to achieve a higher score.