Turbo GX - meaning and definition. What is Turbo GX
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What (who) is Turbo GX - definition

REPLACEMENT FOR THE QUICKDRAW 2D GRAPHICS ENGINE
Quickdraw GX; TrueType GX

Turbo (finance)         
FINANCIAL DERIVATIVE
Rolling turbos; Rolling turbo; Turbo (financial instument)
A turbo is a leveraged financial derivative first introduced by Goldman Sachs in 2004. They are tradable by institutional and private investors and have characteristics similar to contracts for difference and covered warrants.
Turbo laminiferus         
SPECIES OF MOLLUSC
Turbo (Marmarostoma) squamosus; Turbo squamosus; Turbo lamniferus; Crinkly turban
Turbo laminiferus, common name the crinkly turban, is a species of sea snail, marine gastropod mollusk in the family Turbinidae.
Turbo tursicus         
SPECIES OF MOLLUSC
Turbo somnueki
Turbo tursicus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Turbinidae, the turban snails.

Wikipedia

QuickDraw GX

QuickDraw GX was a replacement for the QuickDraw (QD) 2D graphics engine and Printing Manager inside the classic Mac OS. Its underlying drawing platform was a object oriented resolution-independent retained mode system, making it much easier for programmers to perform common tasks (compared to the original QuickDraw). Additionally, GX added various curve-drawing commands that had been lacking from QD, as well as introducing TrueType as its basic font system.

While GX certainly addressed many of the problems QD had, by the time it was available most developers had already developed their own solutions to these problems anyway. GX also suffered from causing a number of incompatibilities in existing programs, notably those that had developed their own QD extensions. This, coupled with opposition from an important fraction of the developer market, especially PostScript owner Adobe, and a lack of communication from Apple about the benefits of GX and why users should adopt it, led to the technology being sidelined.

QuickDraw GX saw little development after its initial release, and was formally "killed" with the purchase of NeXT and the eventual adoption of the Quartz imaging model in Mac OS X. Many of its component features lived on and are now standard in the current Macintosh platform; TrueType GX in particular has, with a few tweaks, become a broadly used modern standard in the form of OpenType Variable Fonts.