Monaco (disambiguation)
Monaco is a sovereign principality in Western Europe.
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Look up Monaco, monaco, Mónaco, or monacò in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Monaco may also refer to:
Places and jurisdictions
- Monaco-Ville, the old town of the principality and one of its administrative divisions
- Monaco, New Zealand, a suburb of Nelson, New Zealand
- Monaco di Baviera, the Italian name for the Bavarian capital Munich (southern Germany)
People
- Monaco (name), a surname, and a list of people with the name
Sport and games
- AS Monaco FC, Monegasque football club participating in French professional league
- Monaco Grand Prix, a Formula 1 motor-racing event held in the principality
- Circuit de Monaco, the street circuit where the Monaco Grand Prix is held.
- Monaco: What's Yours Is Mine, a stealth action video-game by Pocketwatch Games
- Juan Mónaco, an Argentine tennis player
Computing and Internet
- Monaco (typeface), a monospaced font shipping with OS X
- Monaco (editor), a web-based code editor used by Visual Studio Code
- Microsoft Monaco, codename for a music-making program under development (list of Microsoft codenames)
- Monaco, a CSS wiki layout by Wikia
Other uses
- Monaco (band), a 1996–2000 band consisting of Peter Hook and David Potts
- Dodge Monaco, a model of automobile
- Monaco Coach Corporation, a manufacturer of recreational vehicles
- TAG Heuer Monaco, a wristwatch
- MV Monaco, a Panamanian coaster
- Monaco (album)
gollark: The main constraints for high-performance computer stuff *now* are heat and power, or I guess sometimes networking between nodes.
gollark: Also, for random real-world background, there are only two companies making (high-performance, actually widely used) CPUs: Intel and AMD, and two making GPUs: AMD and Nvidia. Other stuff (flash storage, mainboards, RAM, whatever else) is made by many more manufacturers. Alienware and whatnot basically just buy parts from them, possibly design their own cases (and mainboards for laptops, to some extent), and add margin.
gollark: You could just have them require really powerful nonquantum computers.
gollark: Quantum computing accelerates specific workloads, not just *everything*.
gollark: I suppose the future might have a lot of vertical integration going on.
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