PNG  IHDR;IDATxܻn0K )(pA 7LeG{ §㻢|ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lom$^yذag5bÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa{ 6lذaÆ `}HFkm,mӪôô! x|'ܢ˟;E:9&ᶒ}{v]n&6 h_tڠ͵-ҫZ;Z$.Pkž)!o>}leQfJTu іچ\X=8Rن4`Vwl>nG^is"ms$ui?wbs[m6K4O.4%/bC%t Mז -lG6mrz2s%9s@-k9=)kB5\+͂Zsٲ Rn~GRC wIcIn7jJhۛNCS|j08yiHKֶۛkɈ+;SzL/F*\Ԕ#"5m2[S=gnaPeғL lذaÆ 6l^ḵaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa; _ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ RIENDB` Once upon a midnight hour, long ago, in a galaxy, far, far, away, Xlib was originally developed by Jim Gettys, of Digital Equipment Corporation (now part of HP). Warren Turkal did the autotooling in October, 2003. Josh Triplett, Jamey Sharp, and the XCB team (xcb@lists.freedesktop.org) maintain the XCB support. Individual developers include (in no particular order): Sebastien Marineau, Holger Veit, Bruno Haible, Keith Packard, Bob Scheifler, Takashi Fujiwara, Kazunori Nishihara, Hideki Hiura, Hiroyuki Miyamoto, Katsuhisi Yano, Shigeru Yamada, Stephen Gildea, Li Yuhong, Seiji Kuwari. The specifications and documentation contain extensive credits. Conversion of those documents from troff to DocBook/XML was performed by Matt Dew, with assistance in editing & formatting tool setup from Gaetan Nadon and Alan Coopersmith. This work was supported by many organizations (in no particular order), including the X Consortium, Digital Equipment Corporation, Tektronix, The Open Group, OMRON, Wyse Technology, Fujitsu Limited, Sun Microsystems, Fuji Xerox, Sony Corporation, Toshiba Corporation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Silicon Graphics, the XFree86 Project, among others. Patches/fixes came from all over. No doubt we've missed credits. Please let us know who should be credited.