Tank Time (Realfail) Mac OS
During this summer, I realized that Apple’s naming of versions seems a tad odd…
Background
We were sitting around a table in the beautiful Swedish archipelago, having a drink and chatting a little. Big men talk about big guns, right? So, we were discussing different German tank models. Not being just a man, but a computer geek as well, it hit me that the name of German tanks are the same as the name of OS X versions.
Another Mac Gamer HQ favorite, Company of Heroes 2 is the sequel to the original Company of Heroes, released over a decade ago. The sequel takes you directly onto the Eastern Front of WWII for a close-up look at the vagaries of the war you’re waging. No TIMEWAITs on Mac OS X. Normally, when a TCP connection is closed, the socket on the side where close is called first is left in the TIMEWAIT state. When one of the peers is a Mac OS X (Lion) machine, no TIMEWAIT is listed by netstat -an on the Mac if close is called first on the Mac side. Works like a charm — I've been upgrading git all the time using this package and never had the slightest problem. My only issue is that it lags slightly behind the latest & greatest supported git package — it's really a pity it's not kept up-to-date with, say, the Linux version. Mac OS X Apple (another wise move) has modified the way that it reads/treats the different partitions in the EFI, something that currently VirtualBox cannot handle (as of 5.2.2). But, there is a solution.
Names of tanks and operating system versions
When I got back online, I did a quick search, and Internet being what it is, naturally I hadn’t been the only one thinking about it. In German armored vehicles and Apple Mac OS X all these are listed, but please allow me to present a short list:
- Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah
- Tank: Flugabwehrkanonenpanzer Gepard (Gepard in German means Cheetah in English)
- Mac OS X 10.1 Puma
- Tank: Sd.Kfz. 234/2 “Puma”
- Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar
- Tanks: Jaguar 1 and Jaguar 2
- Mac OS X 10.3 Panther
- Tank: Panther
- Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger
- Tanks: Tiger 1 and Tiger 2
- Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard
- Tanks: Leopard 1 and Leopard 2
- Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
- Haven’t found the corresponding tank yet, but I’m sure it exists… 🙂
Really
I’m really not sure where all this comes from, and it might just be coincidence – trust me, I’m not implying that Apple is some kind of Neo-Nazi movement in disguise (thinking about when especially the Tiger tank was mostly active). And sure, I can see why you would like to name something after great mighty cats.
Tank Time (realfail) Mac Os Download
But, what I really think, is that if you’re going to name a product line of any kind, don’t you just stop a moment to think, to contemplate:
a) Have anyone else used this naming convention?
b) Could there be any kind of negative connection?
Tank Time (realfail) Mac Os Catalina
Maybe my guess for the next iPhone to be named iPhone 3G SS isn’t so far off after all… 😉