It was "ticker tape," as in a "ticker tape parade." Back in the days of the telegraph, the latest Stock Market figures were transmitted over telegraph to the offices of the Wall Street stockbrokers and bankers. The latest stock figures would print out on a continuous roll of thin paper, similar to the rolls of receipt paper that retail stores use today. The machine that printed out this paper was called a "stock ticker," because of the noise it made as it printed. The paper was called "ticker tape."
When a parade went by, people would throw shredded ticker tape out the windows to the street below. These parades became known as "ticket tape parades."
Computers and the internet eventually replaced the ticker machine. Nowadays, brokerage firms and TV news networks use a scrolling screen in place of the old ticker machines.
I use windows 7 and I play source fine.
The source code for Windows XP is not publicly available; thus you cannot edit it.
You cannot. Windows Vista is closed-source; they don't make the code available for download.
The cheapest source of windows online would be to use a website like eBay, as people will often be trying to get rid of old windows during renovations. Also consult online classified ads such as Kijiji and craigslist.
There are an estimated 40 million source lines of code in Windows XP.
No it is not.
Windows xp isn't open source so you can't download the source code and edit it. Whatever you can edit you can do it in regedit a tool that comes with windows xp.
Honestly,this is easy to answer,the source folder for Microsoft windows/Windows XP,Ect,Is basically the source for the computer software and registry,and the source of the pc.Google it!!
Open-source is a development model. Windows is an operating system.
Microsoft Windows
microsoft windows
No, Windows 98 was an early, closed, operating system. It was developed, and sold to users by license from MicroSoft.