The Tasman layout engine was first developed by Microsoft. It was developed to improve web support standards for the Macintosh version of internet Explorer 5. At it's release time, the Tasman layout engine was seen as the engine with the best support for HTML and CSS web standards.
Steam
The first car was on diesel.
Abel Tasman's first wife, Jessie Tasman, died in 1638. Their marriage took place in 1637, and her death occurred shortly after their wedding, adding a personal tragedy to Tasman's early life.
The Australian island state of Tasmania is named after Tasman. He was the one who first sailed past it, originally naming it Van Diemen's Land. Within Tasmania, there is also the Tasman Peninsula, Tasman Bridge and the Tasman Highway. The Tasman sea lies between Australia and New Zealand. In New Zealand, places named after Tasman include Tasman Glacier, Tasman Lake, Tasman River, Mt Tasman, Tasman Bay and the Abel Tasman National Park.
The first traction engine was introduced in the 1850s. The first successful traction engine was developed after a series of experiments by Thomas Aveling in 1859.
Being Dutch, Abel Tasman was probably speaking... Dutch.
Gloucester is where the first jet engine was developed .
Thomas Newcommen's invention was further developed by James Watt.
Able Tasman has two wives. Their names were: (First wife) Claejie Heyndricks, and (Second wife) Janetje Tjaers.
The Tasman Sea was named after Tasmania, which was named after Abel Janszoon Tasman, a Dutch explorer. Abel Tasman was the first European to sight both New Zealand and Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania). As the Tasman Sea lies between these two points, it was logical to name it after the first known European explorer to traverse the sea (even though Tasman initially believed that Van Diemen's Land and New Zealand were part of the same continent).
The gasoline engine came first. The gasoline engine was invented and patented in 1823 with the first efficient gasoline engine developed in 1876. The diesel was invented in 1893 which was 70 years after the gasoline engine.
The first practical steam-powered 'engine' was a water pump, developed in 1698 by Thomas Savery.