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Fisheye is a revision-control browser [1] and search engine owned by Atlassian, Inc. Although Fisheye is a commercial product, it is freely available to open source projects and non-profit institutions. [2] In addition to the advanced search [3] and diff capabilities, [4] it provides:
Additional products include Crucible, FishEye, Bamboo, and Clover, which target programmers working with a code base. FishEye, Crucible, and Clover came into Atlassian's portfolio by acquiring another Australian software company, Cenqua, in 2007. [55] In 2010, Atlassian acquired Bitbucket, a hosted service for code collaboration. [56]
Rules of spelling do not always have to be followed by companies and there's no reason for Wikipedia to follow them when this company's other product names (Confluence, Fisheye, Bitbucket, Stash, Bamboo and others) do not. The product FAQ does not explain why it's in all caps, but unless we have a reason to change the product name, we should not.
The chad receiver (or "bit bucket") [1] from a UNIVAC key punch. In computing jargon, the bit bucket (or byte bucket [2] [3]) is where lost computerized data has gone, by any means; any data which does not end up where it is supposed to, being lost in transmission, a computer crash, or the like, is said to have gone to the bit bucket – that mysterious place on a computer where lost data goes ...
TEEKAH LEWIS. For a parent, those first couple years of a child’s life are special. The first steps, the first giggles, the first-time hearing them say, “Momma.”
A Florida attorney found himself on the wrong side of the justice system after he allegedly smashed a dinner plate on a man’s head during a wedding reception.
Bitbucket Server (formerly known as Stash [18]) is a combination Git server and web interface product written in Java and built with Apache Maven. [19] It allows users to do basic Git operations (such as reviewing or merging code, similar to GitHub ) while controlling read and write access to the code.
A day after the Trump administration sent a missive to all federal employees inviting them to resign, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's acting boss, Mark Uyeda, addressed staff in a ...