Knife thrower’s need

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Possible Answers:

AIM.

Last seen on: Wall Street Journal Crossword – Mar 7 2019 – The Birds and the Bees

Random information on the term “AIM”:

The AIM alliance was formed on October 2, 1991 between Apple, IBM, and Motorola to create a new, grandly unified, computing standard based on the POWER instruction set architecture.[1][2]:69 It was further intended to cope with Microsoft’s monopoly and Microsoft’s and Intel’s duopoly. The alliance yielded the launch of Taligent, Kaleida Labs, the highly successful PowerPC CPU family, the CHRP hardware platform standard, and Apple’s highly successful Power Macintosh computer line.

MacWorld[3]

Phil Hester, a designer of the IBM RS/6000, convinced IBM’s president Jack Kuehler of the necessity of a business alliance.[4][5] On July 3, 1991, Apple and IBM signed a noncontractual letter of intent outlining the long-term strategic technology goals of an alliance. It stated the goal of creating a single unifying open-standard computing platform for the whole industry, made of a new hardware design and a next-generation operating system. IBM would bring the Macintosh operating system into the enterprise and Apple would become a prime customer for the new POWER hardware platform. Considering it to be nonetheless critically poorly communicated and confusing to the outside world at this point, industry commentators saw this partnership as an overall competitive force against Microsoft’s monopoly and Intel’s and Microsoft’s duopoly.[6][7] IBM and Motorola would have 300 engineers to codevelop chips at a joint manufacturing facility in Austin, Texas. Motorola would sell the chips to Apple or anyone else.

AIM on Wikipedia