Binary Compatibility Standard - meaning and definition. What is Binary Compatibility Standard
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What (who) is Binary Compatibility Standard - definition

ORGANIZATION
Object Compatibility Standard; 88Open

Binary Compatibility Standard      
<programming, standard> (BCS) The ABI of 88open. (1997-07-03)
Binary-code compatibility         
PROPERTY OF COMPUTER SYSTEMS
Binary compatibility; Object-code compatible; Binary compatible; Object code compatible; Object-code compatibility; Object code compatibility; Binary code compatible; Binary-code compatible; Binary-compatible; Binary code compatibility; Compatibility of binary files
Binary-code compatibility (binary compatible or object-code-compatible) is a property of a computer system, meaning that it can run the same executable code, typically machine code for a general-purpose computer CPU, that another computer system can run. Source-code compatibility, on the other hand, means that recompilation or interpretation is necessary before the program can be run on the compatible system.
Compatibility (geochemistry)         
PARTITIONING OF ELEMENTS IN A MINERAL
Compatibility (Geochemistry)
Compatibility is a term used by geochemists to describe how elements partition themselves in the solid and melt within Earth's mantle. In geochemistry, compatibility is a measure of how readily a particular trace element substitutes for a major element within a mineral.

Wikipedia

88open

88open was an industry standards group set up by Motorola in 1988 to standardize Unix systems on their Motorola 88000 RISC CPU systems. At its peak, the spinoff 88open Consortium Ltd. had a staff of 30 people and over 50 supporters. The effort was largely a failure, at least in terms of attracting attention to the 88000 platform. The group was closed in favor of the AIM alliance, and the 88000 platform was folded into AIM's PowerPC.