In honor of the anime Initial D and its main protagonist car, the Toyota AE86 ("Hachi-Roku") Rule 86 states that every movable object on this planet has the ability to move in a way that is defined with the term "controlled slide" or in layman's terms: "If it exists, it can drift."
by Skattor August 28, 2017
by FluxJoint November 23, 2022
A typical hairdressers car, cheap and unreliable but made to look like a hot wheels car from Woolworths. This car has sporty-looks with a performance below bang average, and has been the worst performing Toyota on the market. Do not confuse this car to be in the same category of the elite Supra and the Toyota 89. The 86 is just a knock off version of the elites made for uni students to pick up girls. Most people who drive this car are going through a midlife identity crisis and it's important to use kind and understanding words while speaking to them. A true car enthusiast would never touch the wheel of the 86, by tradition.
by DenzlWashington April 26, 2022
by Pastiiles March 3, 2019
by Freshy-Senpai December 3, 2015
When an alcoholic Co-worker slides his rum and coke cock in your ass and cums inside your little garlic knot.
by 86'd Papa V November 16, 2016
This was one of the earliest operating systems for Personal Computers.
A variant of CP/M which was designed by Digital Research for use with the Intel 8086 microprocessor and compatible with the later Intel 8088. It followed CP/M as IBM's preferred operating system for the IBM PC.
However, it faded out of use primarily because Digital Research and IBM could not agree on contract licensing and fees. IBM then took up with Bill Gates and Microsoft to use MS-DOS.
This was what set in motion Microsoft as an operating system provider and was ultimately the demise of compact and manageable operating systems for Personal Computers until Microsoft's grasp on them was loosened somewhat. So, ultimately, part of the blame can be laid at the feet of IBM.
A variant of CP/M which was designed by Digital Research for use with the Intel 8086 microprocessor and compatible with the later Intel 8088. It followed CP/M as IBM's preferred operating system for the IBM PC.
However, it faded out of use primarily because Digital Research and IBM could not agree on contract licensing and fees. IBM then took up with Bill Gates and Microsoft to use MS-DOS.
This was what set in motion Microsoft as an operating system provider and was ultimately the demise of compact and manageable operating systems for Personal Computers until Microsoft's grasp on them was loosened somewhat. So, ultimately, part of the blame can be laid at the feet of IBM.
by fronkzippo January 22, 2010