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==== Mac OS X ==== |
==== Mac OS X ==== |
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− | The public releases of Mac OS X |
+ | The public releases of Mac OS X were named after [[big cat]]s and [[California]] landmarks; however, the internal codenames have also been named after wine varieties.<ref name="Ritchie OSX"/> |
* [[Mac OS X 10.0|Mac OS X Developer Preview 3]] – ''Bunsen'' |
* [[Mac OS X 10.0|Mac OS X Developer Preview 3]] – ''Bunsen'' |
||
* [[Mac OS X 10.0|Mac OS X Developer Preview 4]] – ''Gonzo'' |
* [[Mac OS X 10.0|Mac OS X Developer Preview 4]] – ''Gonzo'' |
||
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* [[OS X Yosemite|OS X 10.10 Yosemite]] – ''Syrah''<ref name="Ritchie OSX" /><ref>{{cite web |author= Isenze |title= As Mavericks hits GM, Apple begins seeding nightly builds of OS X 10.9.1 as well as 10.10 'Syrah'. |url= http://irumorsnow.com/2013/10/08/as-mavericks-hits-gm-apple-begins-seeding-nightly-builds-of-os-x-10-9-1-as-well-as-10-10-syrah/ |publisher= iRumors Now |accessdate= November 26, 2013 |date= October 8, 2013 |df= mdy-all |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131203005850/http://irumorsnow.com/2013/10/08/as-mavericks-hits-gm-apple-begins-seeding-nightly-builds-of-os-x-10-9-1-as-well-as-10-10-syrah/ |archive-date= December 3, 2013 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last= Gurman |first= Mark |title= Apple finishing up Mavericks as development shifts to OS X 'Syrah' with iOS 7-influence |url= http://9to5mac.com/2013/10/03/apple-finishing-up-mavericks-as-development-shifts-to-os-x-10-10-ios-8 |publisher= 9to5Mac |accessdate= November 26, 2013 |date= October 3, 2013 |quote= OS X 10.10 is internally codenamed Syrah |df= mdy-all |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131205125629/http://9to5mac.com/2013/10/03/apple-finishing-up-mavericks-as-development-shifts-to-os-x-10-10-ios-8/ |archive-date= December 5, 2013 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref name=Ritchie>{{cite web |last= Ritchie |first= Rene |authorlink= Rene Ritchie |title= OS X 10.10 codenamed Syrah, anyone want to bet it's going to look more like iOS 7? |url= http://www.imore.com/os-x-1010-codenamed-syrah-anyone-want-bet-its-going-look-more-ios-7 |website=iMore |accessdate= August 30, 2014 |date= October 3, 2013 |df= mdy-all |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140903081134/http://www.imore.com/os-x-1010-codenamed-syrah-anyone-want-bet-its-going-look-more-ios-7 |archive-date= September 3, 2014 |url-status= dead }}</ref> |
* [[OS X Yosemite|OS X 10.10 Yosemite]] – ''Syrah''<ref name="Ritchie OSX" /><ref>{{cite web |author= Isenze |title= As Mavericks hits GM, Apple begins seeding nightly builds of OS X 10.9.1 as well as 10.10 'Syrah'. |url= http://irumorsnow.com/2013/10/08/as-mavericks-hits-gm-apple-begins-seeding-nightly-builds-of-os-x-10-9-1-as-well-as-10-10-syrah/ |publisher= iRumors Now |accessdate= November 26, 2013 |date= October 8, 2013 |df= mdy-all |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131203005850/http://irumorsnow.com/2013/10/08/as-mavericks-hits-gm-apple-begins-seeding-nightly-builds-of-os-x-10-9-1-as-well-as-10-10-syrah/ |archive-date= December 3, 2013 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last= Gurman |first= Mark |title= Apple finishing up Mavericks as development shifts to OS X 'Syrah' with iOS 7-influence |url= http://9to5mac.com/2013/10/03/apple-finishing-up-mavericks-as-development-shifts-to-os-x-10-10-ios-8 |publisher= 9to5Mac |accessdate= November 26, 2013 |date= October 3, 2013 |quote= OS X 10.10 is internally codenamed Syrah |df= mdy-all |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131205125629/http://9to5mac.com/2013/10/03/apple-finishing-up-mavericks-as-development-shifts-to-os-x-10-10-ios-8/ |archive-date= December 5, 2013 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref name=Ritchie>{{cite web |last= Ritchie |first= Rene |authorlink= Rene Ritchie |title= OS X 10.10 codenamed Syrah, anyone want to bet it's going to look more like iOS 7? |url= http://www.imore.com/os-x-1010-codenamed-syrah-anyone-want-bet-its-going-look-more-ios-7 |website=iMore |accessdate= August 30, 2014 |date= October 3, 2013 |df= mdy-all |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140903081134/http://www.imore.com/os-x-1010-codenamed-syrah-anyone-want-bet-its-going-look-more-ios-7 |archive-date= September 3, 2014 |url-status= dead }}</ref> |
||
* [[OS X El Capitan|OS X 10.11 El Capitan]] – ''Gala''<ref name="Ritchie OSX" /> |
* [[OS X El Capitan|OS X 10.11 El Capitan]] – ''Gala''<ref name="Ritchie OSX" /> |
||
+ | * [[macOS 13]] – ''Rome''<ref>[https://9to5mac.com/guides/macos-13/ macOS 13: New features, compatibility, release date], 9to5Mac. 2022-05-05.</ref> |
||
===macOS=== |
===macOS=== |
Revision as of 13:46, 22 May 2022
The list of Apple codenames covers the codenames given to products by Apple Inc. during development. The codenames are often used internally only, normally to maintain secrecy of the project. Occasionally a codename may become the released product's name. Most of Apple's codenames from the 1980s and 1990s are provided by the book Apple Confidential 2.0.[1]
Accessories
- AirTags - Apple Tags, B389[2][3]
- AirPods (1st Generation) - B188
- AirPods (2nd Generation) - B288
- AirPods Pro - B298 [4]
- AirPods Max - B515 [5]
- AirPort Express 802.11n (5th Generation) - K31[6]
- Apple IIe Card for the Macintosh LC - Double Exposure
- A rumored augmented reality and virtual reality device - T288
- Apple II 3.5" Disk Controller Card - NuMustang
- Apple Color OneScanner 600/27 - Rio
- Apple Color OneScanner 1200/30 - New Orleans
- HomePod - B238
- Built-in iSight (2005) - M33
- External iSight (2003) - Q8
- Lightning Digital AV Adapter - Haywire
- Magic Trackpad 2 - D67' [7]
- Time Capsule - Wilma, M52
Apple TV
- Apple TV - iTV[8]
- Apple TV (2nd generation) - K66[9]
- Apple TV (3rd generation) - J33[10]
- Apple TV (4th generation) - J42 –
- Apple TV 4K - J105
- Apple TV 4K 2nd generation and new Siri Remote - T1125
Apple Watch
- Apple Watch - Gizmo[11], N27 and N28
Apple A series processors
Apple A series processors' internal codenames are named after wind and weather patterns.[12]
- Apple A6 and A6X – Swift
- Apple A7 – Cyclone
- Apple A8 and A8X – Typhoon
- Apple A9 – Twister
- Apple A10 Fusion – 2 Hurricane cores and 2 Zephyr cores
- Apple A11 Bionic – 2 Monsoon cores and 4 Mistral cores
- Apple A12 Bionic – 2 Vortex cores and 4 Tempest cores
- Apple A13 Bionic – Cebu, with Thunder and Lightning cores[13]
- Apple-designed chips for Mac computers – Kalamata or Star (development stage)[14]
Computers
Apple
- Cortland – Apple IIGS
- Tenspeed – Apple IIGS ROM 3
Macintosh
- Aladdin – Macintosh SE simulation
- Aladdin – Macintosh SE FDHD
- Aladdin – Macintosh Quadra 605
- Amazon – Macintosh Quadra 950
- Apollo – Macintosh Classic II
- Atlantic – Macintosh IIcx
- Aurora – Macintosh IIcx
- Aurora II – Macintosh IIci
- Becks – Macintosh II
- Blackbird – Macintosh IIfx
- Brazil 16c – Macintosh IIvx
- Brazil 32c – Macintosh IIvi
- Cabernet – Macintosh II
- Chablis – Macintosh SE
- Chablis – Macintosh SE FDHD
- Civic – Macintosh Classic
- Cobra – Macintosh IIcx
- Cobra II – Macintosh IIci
- Crusader – Macintosh Quadra 630
- Cyclone – Macintosh Quadra 840AV
- Darwin – Macintosh Quadra 900
- Dragonkok – Macintosh LC 580
- Eclipse – Macintosh Quadra 900
- Elsie – Macintosh LC
- Elsie III – Macintosh LC III
- Erickson – Macintosh IIsi
- Espirit – Macintosh Portable
- Evo 200 – Macintosh Quadra 700
- Fafnir – Macintosh SE/30
- Fat Mac – Macintosh 512K, 512ke
- Foster Farms – Macintosh LC II
- Four Square – Macintosh IIfx
- Freeport – Macintosh SE
- Freeport – Macintosh SE FDHD
- Fridge – Macintosh Quadra 800
- F-16 – Macintosh IIfx
- F-19 – Macintosh IIfx
- Green Jade – Macintosh SE/30
- Hook – Macintosh LC 520
- Hook 33 – Macintosh LC 550
- IIce – Macintosh Quadra 700
- IIex – Macintosh Quadra 900
- IIxi – Macintosh IIfx
- Ikki – Macintosh II
- Laguna – Macintosh Portable
- LD50 – Macintosh TV
- Lisa – Macintosh XL
- Little Big Mac – Macintosh II
- Macintosh – Macintosh 128K
- Malibu – Macintosh Portable
- Maui – Macintosh SE
- Maui – Macintosh SE FDHD
- Milwaukee – Macintosh II
- Montana – Macintosh Classic II
- Mr. T – Macintosh Plus
- Oceanic – Macintosh IIsi
- Optimus – Macintosh LC 575
- Pacific – Macintosh IIci
- Paris – Macintosh II
- Peter Pan – Macintosh TV
- Pinball – Macintosh LC
- PlusPlus – Macintosh SE
- PlusPlus – Macintosh SE FDHD
- Pomona – Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh
- Premise 500 – Macintosh Quadra 900
- Primus – Macintosh Quadra 605
- Prism – Macintosh LC
- Quadra 1000 – Macintosh Quadra 840AV
- Raffica – Macintosh IIsi
- Ray Ban – Macintosh IIsi
- Reno – Macintosh II
- Shadow – Macintosh Quadra 700
- Show Biz – Macintosh Quadra 630
- Show & Tell – Macintosh Quadra 630
- Slice – Macintosh Color Classic
- Smoke and Mirrors – Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh
- Spartacus – Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh
- Speedbump 610 – Macintosh Quadra 610
- Speedbump 650 – Macintosh Quadra 650
- Spike – Macintosh Quadra 700
- Spock – Macintosh IIx
- Stealth – Macintosh IIfx
- Stingray – Macintosh IIci
- Stratos – Macintosh IIx
- Tempest – Macintosh Quadra 660AV
- Typhoon – Macintosh Quadra 840AV
- Uzi – Macintosh II
- Vail – Macintosh LC III
- Weed Whacker – Macintosh IIfx
- Wombat 33 – Macintosh Quadra 800
- XO – Macintosh Classic
- Zone 5 – Macintosh IIfx
- Zydeco – Macintosh Quadra 950
eMac
iBook
- Bismol – iBook
- Lanai – iBook
- Marble – iBook G3 (Dual USB)
- P1 – iBook
- P1.5 – iBook (FireWire)
- P29 – iBook (Dual USB)
- P54 – iBook (14.1 LCD)
- P72B – iBook (Opaque 16 MB VRAM)
- P72B – iBook (32 MB VRAM)
- P73D – iBook (800/900 MHz 32 MB VRAM)
- P92 – iBook (late 2001)
- Q72 – iBook G4 (early 2004)
- Q72B – iBook G4 (mid-2005)
- Q73 – iBook G4 (early 2004)
- Q73B – iBook G4 (mid-2005)
- Son of Pismo – iBook (14.1 LCD)
iMac
- MacMan and Columbus – iMac G3 (Bondi Blue)[15]
- C1 – iMac (Bondi Blue)
- Elroy – iMac (Bondi Blue)
- Fino – iMac G5 20"
- Hero – iMac G5 (17-inch, 20-inch)
- Horizon – iMac G4 (USB 2.0; 15-, 17-inch)
- J30 – iMac (21.5-inch, Late 2012)[6]
- J31 – iMac (27-inch, Late 2012)[6]
- Kihei – iMac, iMac DV, iMac DV+, iMac DV SE
- Kiva – iMac (summer 2001)
- Life Savers – iMac (5 Flavors)
- M23 – iMac G5 20"
- P7 – iMac, iMac DV, iMac DV+, iMac DV SE
- P79 – iMac G4 (17-inch Flat Panel)
- P80 – iMac G4 (Flat Panel)
- Q26B – iMac G4 (15-inch USB 2.0)
- Q26C – iMac G4 (17-inch USB 2.0)
- Q45C – iMac G5 (Ambient Light Sensor) 17-inch
- Q45D – iMac G5 (Ambient Light Sensor) 20-inch
- Q87 – iMac G5 iSight (17-, 20-inch)
- Tailgate – iMac (Bondi Blue)
- Tessera – iMac G4 (flat panel)
Mac mini
Mac Pro
MacBook
- Stealth – MacBook (12-inch)
- M42 – MacBook (Early-2006)
MacBook Air
- J11 – MacBook Air (11-inch, Mid-2012)[6]
- J13 – MacBook Air (13-inch, Mid-2012)[6]
- J41 – MacBook Air (11-inch, Mid-2013)
MacBook Pro
- MacBook Pro 13" - J52 [18]
- Macbook Pro 13" - J130
- Macbook Pro (13-inch, Early 2011) - K90I
- Macbook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) - K91
- Macbook Pro (17-inch, Early 2011) - K92
- Macbook Pro (13-inch, Late 2011) - K90IA [19]
- Macbook Pro (15-inch, Late 2011) - K91A[19]
- Macbook Pro (17-inch, Late 2011) - K92A[19]
- MacBook Pro (13-inch with Retina display) - D1 [20]
- MacBook Pro (15-inch with Retina display) - D2 [20][6]
- MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2013) - J44 [21]
- MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Early 2013) - J45 [22]
- MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2015) - J53
PowerBook
- 101 – PowerBook G3 (Bronze Keyboard)
- 102 – PowerBook G3 (FireWire)
- 103 – PowerBook G4
- AJ – PowerBook Duo 2300c/100
- Ansel – PowerBook Duo 250
- Asahi – PowerBook 100
- Blackbird – PowerBook 540, 540c, 550c, 500 with PowerPC
- Blackbird LC – PowerBook 520, 520c, 550c, 500 with PowerPC
- BOB W (Best of Both Worlds) – PowerBook Duo 210, 230
- Brooks – PowerBook 160
- Cinnamon – PowerBook Duo 210, 230
- Colt 45 – PowerBook 145
- Colt 45 – PowerBook 145B
- Comet – PowerBook 2400c
- Converse – PowerBook 180
- Dart LC – PowerBook 165
- Dartanian – PowerBook 180
- DBLite – PowerBook Duo 210, 230
- Derringer – PowerBook 100
- Epic – PowerBook 1400c, 1400cs
- Escher – PowerBook Duo 270c
- Gemini – PowerBook Duo Dock/Plus/II
- Hammerhead – PowerBook G4 (17-inch)
- Hokusai – PowerBook 180c
- Hooper – PowerBook 3400c[23]
- Ivory – PowerBook G4 (DVI)
- Jedi – PowerBook 150
- Kanga – PowerBook G3
- Lombard – PowerBook G3 (Bronze Keyboard)
- Mercury – PowerBook G4
- Mighty Cat – PowerBook 2400c
- Monet – PowerBook 165c
- Mustang – PowerBook 5300 Series
- M2 – PowerBook 5300
- Nautilus – PowerBook 2400c
- Omega – PowerBook 190
- Omega – PowerBook 190cs
- Onyx – PowerBook G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)
- P25 – PowerBook G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)
- PDQ – PowerBook G3 (September 1998)
- Pismo – PowerBook (FireWire)
- PowerBook 3500 – PowerBook G3
- P8 – PowerBook G3 (FireWire)
- P88 – PowerBook G4 Titanium (1 GHz/867 MHz)
- P99 – PowerBook G4 (12-inch)
- Q16 – PowerBook G4 (15-inch FW800)
- Q16A – PowerBook G4 (15-inch 1.5/1.33GHz)
- Q41 – PowerBook G4 (17-inch 1.33GHz)
- Q41A – PowerBook G4 (17-inch 1.5 GHz)
- Q51 – PowerBook G5 (EVT1)
- Q54 – PowerBook G4 (12-inch DVI)
- Q54A – PowerBook G4 (12-inch 1.33 GHz)
- Road Warrior – PowerBook 170
- Rosebud – PowerBook 100
- Spruce Goose – PowerBook 540/540c
- SR-71 – PowerBook 540, 540c, 550c, 500 with PowerPC
- Tim – PowerBook 170
- Tim Lite – PowerBook 140
- Wallstreet – PowerBook G3
- Yeager – PowerBook Duo 280/280c
PowerMac
- Artemis – Power Macintosh G3 All-In-One
- Kansas – Power Macintosh 8600
- Kansas – Power Macintosh 9600
- Autobahn – Power Macintosh 9500
- BHA (Butt-Head Astronomer) – Power Macintosh 7100
- Bongo – Power Macintosh 5200 LC/5300 LC
- Carl Sagan – Power Macintosh 7100
- Catalyst – Power Macintosh 7200
- Chimera – Power Macintosh 5400
- Clockwork – Power Mac G4 (Digital Audio)
- Cold Fusion – Power Macintosh 8100
- Crusader – Power Macintosh 6200
- Cupid – Power Macintosh 4400, 200 Mhz
- Cypher – Power Mac G5 (late 2005)
- El Capitan – Power Macintosh G3 (Blue and White)
- Elixir – Power Macintosh 6300
- Excalibur – Power Macintosh 5400
- Flagship – Power Macintosh 8100
- Frosty – Power Macintosh 4400, 160 MHz
- Gazelle – Power Macintosh 6500
- Gossamer – Power Macintosh G3 (beige) logic board
- Hacksaw – Power Macintosh 6400
- Halo – unreleased Hi-end Power Macintosh project (1996)
- InstaTower – Power Macintosh 6400
- LAW (Lawyers Are Wimps) – Power Macintosh 7100
- Medusa2 – Power Mac G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)
- Montana – Power Macintosh 7300
- Montana 7600 – Power Macintosh 7600
- Mystic – Power Mac G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)
- Nichrome – Power Mac G4 (Quicksilver)
- Nitro – Power Macintosh 8500
- Omega – Power Mac G5
- Phoenix – Power Macintosh 5500
- Piltdown Man – Power Macintosh 6100
- Project E – Power Mac G4 (AGP Graphics)
- P5 – Power Mac G4 (AGP Graphics)
- P57 – Power Mac G4 (Mirrored Drive Doors)
- P58 – Power Mac G4 (FW 800)
- P9 – Power Mac G4 Cube
- PowerExpress – Power Macintosh 9700 Prototype
- Q37 – Power Mac G5
- Q77 – Power Mac G5 (June 2004)
- Q78 – Power Mac G5 (June 2004)
- Quicksilver – Power Mac G4
- Rebound – Power Macintosh 5200 LC/5300 LC
- Rubicon – Power Mac G4 Cube
- Sawtooth – Power Mac G4 (AGP Graphics)
- Silk – Power Macintosh G3 (Blue and White)
- SnakeBite – Power Mac G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)
- Stumpy – unreleased Hi-end Power Macintosh enclosure, prototype of El Capitan
- Tangent – Power Mac G4 (Digital Audio)
- Tanzania – Power Macintosh 4400, 150 MHz
- Titan – Power Mac G4 (Quicksilver)
- TNT – Power Macintosh 7500
- Trailblazer – Power Macintosh 5200 LC/5300 LC
- Transformer – Power Macintosh 5200 LC/5300 LC
- Trinity – Power Mac G4 Cube
- Tsunami – Power Macintosh 9500
- Yikes! – Power Mac G4 (PCI Graphics) logic board
- Yosemite – Power Macintosh G3 (Blue and White) logic board
- Yosemite 1.5 – Power Macintosh G3 (Blue and White) Rev.2 logic board
iPad
- J1 – iPad (3rd generation) (Wi-Fi)[24]
- J2 – iPad (3rd generation) (Wi-Fi + Cellular)
- J72 – iPad Air[25]
- J82 – iPad Air 2
- J85 – iPad Mini 2 (with Retina display)[25]
- J96 – iPad Mini 4
- J98 and J99 – iPad Pro[26]
- K48 – iPad (1st generation)[10][27][28]
- K93 – iPad 2 (Wi-Fi)
- K94 – iPad 2 (Wi-Fi + GSM)
- K95 – iPad 2 (Wi-Fi + CDMA)[10]
- P101 – iPad (4th generation) (Wi-Fi)
- P103 – iPad (4th generation) (Wi-Fi + Cellular International)
- P105 – iPad mini (1st generation) (Wi-Fi)
- P107 – iPad mini (1st generation) (Wi-Fi + Cellular International)
- Purple or Purple 1 – Prototype tablet in 2004[29]
iPhone
- iPhone (1st generation) – M68 and Purple or Purple 2[29][30][31][32]
- iPhone 3G – N82
- iPhone 3GS – N88
- iPhone 4 – N90
- iPhone 4 (CDMA) – N92[33]
- iPhone 4S – N94[10]
- iPhone 5 – N41 and N42[34][35]
- iPhone 5C – N48[36]
- iPhone 5S – N51 and N53[37]
- iPhone 6 – N61[36]
- iPhone 6 Plus – N56[36]
- iPhone SE (1st generation) – N69[38][39]
- iPhone 6S – N71[40]
- iPhone 6S Plus – N66[40]
- iPhone 7 – D10[41]
- iPhone 7 Plus – D11[41]
- iPhone 8 – D20[42]
- iPhone 8 Plus – D21[42]
- iPhone X – D22 and Ferrari[42][41]
- iPhone XR – N84 and Star or Lisbon or Hangzhou[43]
- iPhone XS – D32[43]
- iPhone XS Max – D33[43]
- iPhone 11 – N104[44]
- iPhone 11 Pro – D42[44]
- iPhone 11 Pro Max – D43[44]
- iPhone SE (2nd generation) – D79[45]
iPod
- iPod - Dulcimer
- iPod (5th generation) - M25
- iPod touch (1st generation) - N45
- iPod touch (2nd generation) - N72
- iPod touch (3rd generation) - N18
- iPod touch (4th generation) - N81
- iPod touch (6th generation) - N102
Other
- Brick – Apple's aluminum unibody manufacturing process
- Garta & T288 – An augmented reality device & prototype [47]
- Luck & Franc – Apple Glasses, an augmented reality device[48]
- Nexus – Retail Store Initiative
- Magnolia – Apple facility including a regenerative thermal oxidizer to reduce pollution[49]
- Titan – Apple Car[49]
Software
Applications
- AR app - Gobi [50]
- Mac App Store - Firenze[51]
- Apple Music Fuse – [52]
- iMessage – Madrid
- iTunes - iMusic [53][54]
- Safari - Alexander[52]
- QuickTime - Warhol
- Spotlight - Matador[52]
- Swift Playgrounds - Serenity
audioOS
For use with HomePod
audioOS 11
|
audioOS 12
|
audioOS 13
|
iOS
The codename convention for iOS are ski resorts.[52][17][55]
iOS 1
|
iOS 2
|
iOS 3
|
iOS 4
|
iOS 5
|
iOS 6
|
iOS 7
|
iOS 8
|
iOS 9
|
iOS 10
|
iOS 11
|
iOS 12
iOS 13
iOS 14
|
Mac OS System
Mac OS System is often cited as having multiple codenames.
- System 6.0.4 (1989) – Antares
- System 6.0.5 (1990) – Big Deal
- System 6.0.6 – SixPack (never released due to AppleTalk bug)
- System 6.0.8 (1991) – Terminator
- System 7 – Blue, Big Bang, M80, Pleiades
- System 7.0 (1991) – Furnishings 2000
- System 7.0.1 (1991) – Road Warrior, Beta Cheese
- System 7.1 (1992) – Cube-E, I Tripoli
- System 7.1.1 (aka System 7 Pro) (1993) – Jirocho
- Prototype of System 7.1 for x86 processors – Project Star Trek
- System 7.5 (PowerPC) (1994) – Mozart, Capone
- Mac OS 7.5.1 – Danook, Thag
- Mac OS 7.5.2 – Marconi
- Mac OS 7.5.2 – Unity
- Mac OS 7.5.3 Revision 2.1 – Buster
- Mac OS 7.5.3 Revision 2.1 – Son of Buster
- Mac OS 7.6 – Harmony
- Mac OS 7.6.1 – Ides of Buster
Mac OS and Mac OS Server
The codename convention for Mac OS 8, 9, and Mac OS X Server 1.0 mostly follow musical terminology.
Mac OS 8 and 9
- Mac OS 8 – Tempo
- Mac OS 8.1 – Bride of Buster, Scimitar
- Mac OS 8.5 – Allegro
- Mac OS 8.5.1 – Rick Ford Release, The
- Mac OS 8.6 – Veronica
- Mac OS 9 – Sonata
- Mac OS 9.0.4 – Minuet
- Mac OS 9.1 –Fortissimo
- Mac OS 9.2 –Moonlight
- Mac OS 9.2.1 –Limelight
- Mac OS 9.2.2 –LU1
Mac OS X Server
- Mac OS X Server 1.0 – Rhapsody
- Mac OS X Server 10.2 Jaguar – Tigger
Mac OS X
The public releases of Mac OS X were named after big cats and California landmarks; however, the internal codenames have also been named after wine varieties.[56]
- Mac OS X Developer Preview 3 – Bunsen
- Mac OS X Developer Preview 4 – Gonzo
- Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah Public Beta – Kodiak
- Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah – Cheetah, Cyan
- Mac OS X Public Release 1 – Hera
- Mac OS X Public Release 2 – Beaker
- Mac OS X 10.3 Panther – Pinot[56]
- Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger – Merlot[56]
- Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger (Support for Intel processors) – Chardonnay[56]
- Mac OS X 10.4.1 Tiger – Atlanta
- Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard – Chablis[56]
- Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
- Mac OS X 10.7 Lion – Barolo[56]
- OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion – Zinfandel[56]
- OS X 10.9 Mavericks – Cabernet[57]
- OS X 10.10 Yosemite – Syrah[56][58][59][60]
- OS X 10.11 El Capitan – Gala[56]
- macOS 13 – Rome[61]
macOS
Public release names for macOS are named after landmarks in California,[62] however the internal codenames naming convention follows after varieties of apples.[56]
- macOS Sierra 10.12 – Fuji
- macOS High Sierra 10.13 – Lobo[56]
- macOS Mojave 10.14 – Liberty[56]
- macOS Catalina 10.15 – Jazz[63][64]
tvOS
tvOS 9
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tvOS 10
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tvOS 11
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tvOS 12
tvOS 13
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watchOS
- watchOS often follows the codename convention for beaches.[52][65]
- Betas - all betas carry the following codenames, succeeded by the word "Seed". For example, watchOS 3.2 beta is known as ElectricSeed.
- Burrito – Apple Watch sleep tracking (rumored, upcoming)[66]
watchOS 1
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watchOS 2
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watchOS 3
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watchOS 4
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watchOS 5
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watchOS 6
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Technologies
- Switching to x86 architecture and the Intel chip platform - Marklar [52]
- A system shell for stereo AR-enabled apps - StarBoard [47]
- Apple Pay - Stockholm
- AppleShare - Killer Rabbit
- CarPlay - Stark [52][67]
- CoreMediaIO - Tundra
- Dictation Services - Ironwood
- Face ID - Pearl
- HFS - Turbo File System (TFS)
- iCloud - Ubiquity [52]
- iOS app support in macOS - Marzipan
- Toolbox ROM version $077D - SuperMario
- MacInTalk 3.2 Text to Speech (from mis-pronouncing Galatea) - Gala Tea
- PowerPC Modern Memory Manager PowerPC - Figment
- 32-Bit QuickDraw - Jackson Pollock
- QuickDraw GX - Skia
- Reality Operating System - rOS
- ThunderBolt (interface) - T29
- Touch ID - Mesa
References
- ↑ Linzmayer, Owen. "Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World's Most Colorful Company", No Starch Press, 2004, p. 45.
- ↑ Apple revamping Find My Friends & Find My iPhone in unified app, developing Tile-like personal item tracking (2019-04-17). Retrieved on 25 September 2019.
- ↑ Dutta, Pururaj (2 April 2020). Exclusive: AirTags confirmed in a new Apple Support Video!.
- ↑ Rambo, Guilherme (2019-10-02). New in-ear AirPods with noise cancellation found in iOS 13.2 beta (en-US).
- ↑ Apple's over-ear headphones may be called 'AirPods Studio' & retail for $349 (en).
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Hughes, Neil (June 6, 2012). New part numbers reveal Apple to refresh most of Mac lineup at WWDC. Apple Insider. Retrieved on November 27, 2013.
- ↑ 169327: Fuji Preference Panes PT TrackPad (D67, 081116, PC, ProRes, 442HQ) (ZIP). Apple Inc. (September 27, 2016).
- ↑ Archived copy.
- ↑ Joshua Topolsky. The next Apple TV revealed: cloud storage and iPhone OS on tap... and a $99 price tag. AOL. Retrieved on April 4, 2015.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Gurman, Mark (November 28, 2011). Apple's next-generation Apple TV moves closer to reality, assigned J33 codename. 9to5Mac.
- ↑ Apple's New Job: Selling a Smartwatch to an Uninterested Public (27 February 2015).
- ↑ Sohail, Omar (May 25, 2018). Apple A12 Bionic & A12X Part Numbers With CPU Codename Provided in Latest Leak – Earlier Performance Numbers Peaked at 30% Better Scores.
- ↑ Sohail, Omar. Apple's Upcoming A13 Chipset Codename Allegedly Revealed – 7nm FinFET Node Expected to Be Retained [Update].
- ↑ "Apple Plans to Use Its Own Chips in Macs From 2020, Replacing Intel", April 3, 2018.
- ↑ Dormehl, Luke (April 17, 2018). iMac's terrible code name was an in-joke between Jobs and Schiller.
- ↑ Fekete, István (June 20, 2013). Benchmarks Surface for Next-Gen 13" MacBook Pro, Mid-2013 Mac Pro. iPhone in Canada. Retrieved on November 27, 2013.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 Trenholm, Rich (December 5, 2011). Apple's secret iOS codenames revealed. CNET UK. Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ 169327: Fuji Preference Panes (PT, J52, 081116, PC, ProRes, 442HQ) (ZIP). Apple Inc. (September 27, 2016).
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 Gurman, Mark (October 13, 2011). MacBook Pros constrained, new models appear in Apple's inventory system. 9to5Mac. Retrieved on November 27, 2013. “the new internal code names for the updated MacBook Pro line are K90IA (13-inch), K91A (15-inch), and K92A (17-inch). The A in the codename signifies this next MacBook Pro refresh as being relatively minor.”
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 Gurman, Mark (October 14, 2012). 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display confirmed for Apple event. 9to5Mac. Retrieved on November 26, 2013. “The current 15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display is codenamed D2, and its smaller sibling is in fact, as predicted this morning, dubbed D1 internally.”
- ↑ Slivka, Eric (July 20, 2013). Next-Generation 13-Inch MacBook Pro Benchmarked with Modest Performance Gains. MacRumors. Retrieved on November 27, 2013.
- ↑ Slivka, Eric (July 9, 2013). Next-Generation 15-Inch MacBook Pro Shows Up in Benchmarks. MacRumors. Retrieved on November 27, 2013.
- ↑ Paul Kunkel & Rick English, Apple Design pp 265–267, Graphis. ISBN: 1-888001-25-9.
- ↑ Gurman, Mark (November 21, 2011). Reported Retina Display iPad 3 with J2 codename shows up in hidden iOS 5 code. 9to5Mac. Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 Gurman, Mark (January 25, 2013). Retina 'J85′ iPad mini in October, faster 'N51/N53′ iPhone 5S with 13MP Sony camera on target for July?. 9to5Mac. Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ Upcoming Apple iPad Might Feature Split-Screen Capability And Multi-User Login: Report. Retrieved on November 1, 2015.
- ↑ Yarow, Jay (December 16, 2010). Guess What Apple's Top Secret Code Name Was For The iPad. Business Insider. Retrieved on November 26, 2013. “Apple's top secret codename for the iPad was K48, according to the FBI's complaint.”
- ↑ Ahmed, Azam. "Executive Pleads Guilty to Leaking Apple Secrets", The New York Times, The New York Times Company, July 6, 2010. Retrieved on July 29, 2012.
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 Murtazin, Eldar (June 20, 2010). Apple's Phone: From 1980s' Sketches to iPhone. Part 3. Retrieved on March 5, 2019.
- ↑ Lambert, Terry (December 19, 2016). Here's what it was like to work on the original iPhone, codenamed 'Project Purple'. Business Insider. Retrieved on March 4, 2019.
- ↑ Matte, Daniel (April 10, 2017). Open-Source Clues to Google's Mysterious Fuchsia OS. IEEE Spectrum. IEEE. Retrieved on March 4, 2019.
- ↑ Rene Ritchie. ""Project Purple" and the pre-history of the iPhone", iMore, August 4, 2012. Retrieved on April 2, 2019.
- ↑ CDMA iPhone 4 has N92 codename, nears production. Electronista (August 11, 2010). Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ Vascellaro, Jessica (September 12, 2012). Expectations Build Up for Apple's New iPhone. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved on November 26, 2013. “The next iPhone, which has been referred to internally by the code name N41, has been in the works for more than a year, a person familiar with the matter said.”
- ↑ Duadi. Apple to Reveal "N42" Codenamed iPhone at Conventional Pricing. TechGlued. Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 36.2 Hein, Buster (August 22, 2014). Foxconn factory leaks exact dimensions of iPhone 6. Cult of Mac. Retrieved on August 22, 2014.
- ↑ Truta, Filip (January 26, 2013). iPhone 5S Codenamed N51 and N53 to Launch in July – Report. Softpedia. Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ Apple readies 'iPhone 5se', not '6c', for March/April with curved edges & Live Photos (22 January 2016). Retrieved on 16 September 2019.
- ↑ iPhone SE: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know (en) (21 March 2016). Retrieved on 16 September 2019.
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 Jade, Kaspar. Sources: Apple's 2015 'iPhone 6s' models to gain Force Touch but no dual-camera system. Retrieved on November 1, 2015.
- ↑ 41.0 41.1 41.2 Sin, Ben. Next iPhone Is Codenamed 'Ferrari' Internally, According To Chinese Leaks.
- ↑ 42.0 42.1 42.2 Smith, Chris. "Apple's rumored 2017 roadmap: An incredible new iPhone 8 and two boring iPhone 7s models", Boy Genius Report, December 21, 2016. (in en-US)
- ↑ 43.0 43.1 43.2 Codename D33 Archives - Digital Masters Magazine (en-US).
- ↑ 44.0 44.1 44.2 Rambo, Guilherme (2019-07-23). Apple to release three 'iPhone 11' models this fall (en-US).
- ↑ Models (April 17, 2020). Retrieved on April 27, 2020.
- ↑ Apple Rumored to Announce New iPod Touch, Nano and Shuffle Around July 14 (en). Retrieved on 21 May 2020.
- ↑ 47.0 47.1 iOS 13 Code Suggests Apple Testing AR Headset With 'StarBoard' Mode, 'Garta' Codename, and More [Updated] (2018-09-01).
- ↑ 'Apple Glasses' explained and how iPhone-connected item trackers will work (2019-09-03).
- ↑ 49.0 49.1 Edmonds, Rich. Apple car version code names.
- ↑ Leaked pics from Apple's AR app Gobi (18 May 2020).
- ↑ App Store's version.plist (Mac OS X 10.6.8) (2019-06-03).
- ↑ 52.0 52.1 52.2 52.3 52.4 52.5 52.6 52.7 Staff (July 3, 2016). Apple code names.
- ↑ Jade, Kasper. "Apple Acquires SoundJam, Programmer for iMusic", AppleInsider, January 8, 2001. Retrieved on April 2, 2019.
- ↑ Steve Jobs Keynote Macworld 2001 SF (English) (Stevenote). YouTube (January 9, 2001). “"The digital lifestyle era, driven by applications like iMovie and our two new ones today: iMusic [sic]..."”
- ↑ Rene Ritchie (December 3, 2011). iOS version code-names. Retrieved on August 30, 2014.
- ↑ 56.00 56.01 56.02 56.03 56.04 56.05 56.06 56.07 56.08 56.09 56.10 56.11 Rene Ritchie (August 30, 2017). macOS and OS X version code-names. Retrieved on March 4, 2019.
- ↑ Gurman, Mark (April 29, 2013). Apple to release OS X 10.9 with new power-user features, more from iOS later this year. Retrieved on August 30, 2014. “OS X 10.9, which is internally codenamed “Cabernet,”...”
- ↑ Isenze (October 8, 2013). As Mavericks hits GM, Apple begins seeding nightly builds of OS X 10.9.1 as well as 10.10 'Syrah'.. iRumors Now. Retrieved on November 26, 2013.
- ↑ Gurman, Mark (October 3, 2013). Apple finishing up Mavericks as development shifts to OS X 'Syrah' with iOS 7-influence. 9to5Mac. Retrieved on November 26, 2013. “OS X 10.10 is internally codenamed Syrah”
- ↑ Rene Ritchie (October 3, 2013). OS X 10.10 codenamed Syrah, anyone want to bet it's going to look more like iOS 7?. Retrieved on August 30, 2014.
- ↑ macOS 13: New features, compatibility, release date, 9to5Mac. 2022-05-05.
- ↑ Ha, Anthony (June 10, 2013). Apple Has A New, California-Based Naming Scheme For OS X, Starting With OS X Mavericks. TechCrunch. Archived from the original on July 9, 2017. Retrieved on June 10, 2013.
- ↑ /usr/standalone/i386/SecureBoot.bundle/Contents/Resources/BuildManifest.plist <key>BuildTrain</key> <string>macOSJazz</string>
- ↑ Painter, Lewis. "Complete list of Mac OS X & macOS versions: first to the latest macOS", January 13, 2020.
- ↑ Rene Ritchie. watchOS version code names. iMore. Retrieved on March 4, 2019.
- ↑ Apple Watch Sleep Tracking, Schooltime Mode, AR/VR Headset Icon, and More Revealed in iOS 13 Code (2019-09-02).
- ↑ Rene Ritchie (March 4, 2014). MacBreak Weekly 392 - TWiT.TV. TWiT. Retrieved on March 6, 2014.
See also
External links
- List of Apple codenames at Wikipedia
Articles
- The inside story behind Apple's secret code names at Business Insider India