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Developers are creative. Not as they create wonderfull GUIs or proof their sense for art with good color combinations, but with code names.
Every project has a code name, sometimes official, sometimes private (with a good reason!). Here are my favourites:

  • Android:
  • grml (Live distribution based on Debian GNU/Linux, comes from Austria therefore in German)
    • Hustenstopper (cough stopper)
    • Eierspass (egg fun)
    • Meilenschwein (mile pig, it's a pun with milestone)
    • Lackdose-Allergie (lacquer can allergy, it's a pun with lactose allergy)
    • Hello-Wien (pun with Halloween, Wien being German for Vienna)

I really like to see the funniest code names you ever heard of.

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Thanks Aaron for explaining the pun with Halloween ;) – furtelwart Nov 4 at 9:32
How about codenaming an OS Windows? – Crimson Nov 4 at 13:09

15 Answers

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Delphi, by Borland. It was designed to be really easy to use for database apps and the biggest database at the time was Oracle so where do you go to talk to the Oracle? Delphi of course!

The code name stuck and became the actual product name.

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Eclipse, written in Java, a language created by Sun.

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And they still insist that this was just a coincidence :) – Aaron Digulla Nov 4 at 9:50
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But that doesn't count as a code name ;) – tomlog Nov 4 at 10:57
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I heard that MS Excel's code name was 'yoga' - because they wanted to adopt the Lotus position - meh...

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Once I tried to acquire the Window-Class-name of Word (I think 2000) and was presented with "Opus". – Bobby Nov 4 at 11:00
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The code name for the Microsoft Layer for Unicode was Godot because it was deemed long overdue.

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Not a direct answer, but nevertheless my fave story about project code names - Apple and Carl Sagan.

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QDOS was the name of the ancestor of MS-DOS. QDOS simply means Quick and Dirty Operating System...

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  • Antlr, (a parser generator) referring to:
  • Bison, refering to:
  • Yacc (Yet another compiler compiler)
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Wasn't that "antlr", containing even the purpose? (LR parser) – Johannes Rössel Nov 4 at 18:23
You're right. Fixed that, writing it as antler made the pun more visible i guess. – rsp Nov 4 at 19:41
You left out an important one: Terrence Parr, the author of ANTLR is a vocal opponent of LR-parsers, which is why it is no coincidence that ANTLR (which is an LL-parser generator) can be read as "Anti-LR". – Jörg W Mittag Nov 4 at 22:58
Bison don't have antlers, though. They have horns. – mmyers Nov 5 at 19:34
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one of the releases of yard was named 'milkshakes', in reference to the (somewhat incomprehensible) kelis lyric "my milkshake brings all the boys to the yard"

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I hope their selling customers don't get it ... – furtelwart Nov 5 at 21:13
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We code-named the projects within our business area after lakes, we were an international group so it was one way for the project leaders to honour their home countries, we had Michigan, Ohio, Lucerne, Windermere and so on.

My favourite was Ness. After a while the project, as many do, started to go late but it had way more bugs than were expected. So we obviously blamed the mythical monster lurking in its depths ...

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10 years ago we named one of our versions FoxFire. By the time we released it, we had to rename it because of copyright issues. So we renamed it to Copper (Which is surprisingly close to Chrome).

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Did you have to rename because of Firefox, or because of another company/product called FoxFire? – tomlog Nov 4 at 11:00
Firefox of course. – Faruz Nov 4 at 11:24
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Heard that Amazon was originally named "Cadabra" but it sounded too much like "Cadaver" - a human corpse.

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GNU: Gnu's Not Unix.

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My previous employer named software releases after Muppets, and hardware platforms after Boston MBTA stations. Production hardware followed the Red Line (Alewife, Davis, Porter...) and test hardware the Green Line (Lechmere, SciencePark, NorthStation...). I was never sure what they'd do when they got to Park Street.

On a more serious note, this is what convinced me that names for things that go in a sequence should also be sequential.

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Poppler. Isn't it?

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python language to non technical people like "I know python" ;)

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