Wilhelm Raabe Literature Prize

The Wilhelm Raabe Literature Prize (German: Wilhelm-Raabe-Literaturpreis) is a German literary award established in 2000 by the city of Braunschweig and the radio broadcaster Deutschlandradio.[1] It is named after the 18th century writer Wilhelm Raabe and is awarded for an individual work. The prize sum is 30,000 euro, making it one of the most significant German literary awards after the Georg Büchner Prize and the Joseph-Breitbach-Preis.

Recipients

Previous Recipients

The award had until 1990 been known as the Wilhelm Raabe Prize.

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gollark: "Metal score" sounds like they're using Metal, i.e. the *GPU* abstraction layer on macOS.
gollark: Ah, it says here that many of Apple's people got hired by "Nuvia" which then got acquired by Qualcomm somehow.
gollark: The A15 apparently uses basically identical cores to its predecessor.
gollark: Apparently Apple's CPU team mostly got hired away recently, so they might not be as good in the future.

References

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