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Jabber

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Possible Answers:

YAK.

Last seen on: NY Times Crossword 13 Mar 23, Monday

Random information on the term “Jabber”:

Jabber.org is a public, free instant messaging (IM) and presence service, based on XMPP, an open standard for IM.

Jabber.org was started in 1999 and has offered free instant messaging continuously since. It originally served as the development test bed for the jabberd project, the original Jabber/XMPP server. After becoming more stable it also became more popular with end users. As of 2012, it was a public production service, and one of the biggest nodes[citation needed] on the open XMPP network, with an average of 17,000 users logged in at a time.

Jabber.org originally ran on what is now known as Jabberd14. In 2006 the service was migrated to ejabberd on which it ran until 2010. In 2010 the service was migrated to Isode Limited’s M-Link XMPP Server. Which was then migrated to Prosody_(software) in 2023 resulting in slight account disruption.

Originally, Jabber.org also offered Jabber accounts. Since June 25, 2013 it stopped offering new accounts although it supports Jabber/XMPP accounts created by other services.

Jabber on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “YAK”:

Poephagus grunniens

The domestic yak (Bos grunniens), also known as the Tartary ox, grunting ox or hairy cattle, is a species of long-haired domesticated cattle found throughout the Himalayan region of the Indian subcontinent, the Tibetan Plateau, Kachin State (Northern Myanmar), Yunnan, Sichuan, Gilgit-Baltistan (Kashmir), and as far north as Mongolia and Siberia. It is descended from the wild yak (Bos mutus).

The English word “yak” originates from the Tibetan: .mw-parser-output .uchen{font-family:”Jomolhari”,”Uchen”,”Noto Serif Tibetan Medium”,”Noto Serif Tibetan”,”BabelStone Tibetan Slim”,”Yagpo Tibetan Uni”,”Noto Sans Tibetan”,”Microsoft Himalaya”,”Kailash”,”DDC Uchen”,”TCRC Youtso Unicode”,”Tibetan Machine Uni”,”Qomolangma-Uchen Sarchen”,”Qomolangma-Uchen Sarchung”,”Qomolangma-Uchen Suring”,”Qomolangma-Uchen Sutung”,”Qomolangma-Title”,”Qomolangma-Subtitle”,”DDC Rinzin”,”Qomolangma-Woodblock”,”Qomolangma-Dunhuang”}.mw-parser-output .ume{font-family:”Qomolangma-Betsu”,”Qomolangma-Chuyig”,”Qomolangma-Drutsa”,”Qomolangma-Edict”,”Qomolangma-Tsumachu”,”Qomolangma-Tsuring”,”Qomolangma-Tsutong”,”TibetanSambhotaYigchung”,”TibetanTsugRing”,”TibetanYigchung”}གཡག་, Wylie: g.yag. In Tibetan and Balti it refers only to the male of the species, the female being called Tibetan: འབྲི་, Wylie: bri, Tibetan: འབྲི་, Wylie: dri or Tibetan: གནག, Wylie: g.nag in Tibetan and Tibetan: ཧཡག་མོ་, Wylie: hYag-mo in Balti. In English, as in most other languages that have borrowed the word, “yak” is usually used for both sexes, with “bull” or “cow” referring to each sex separately.

YAK on Wikipedia

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