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2600

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2600

2600 is a natural number following 2599 and preceding 2601. As an integer it appears in numeric sequences, calendrical reckoning, technological identifiers, cultural titles, and institutional nomenclature across diverse contexts. The number intersects with historical calendrical years, computing conventions, media productions, nonprofit organizations, and miscellaneous designations in transportation, law, and manufacturing.

Number

As a cardinal integer, 2600 is situated between 2599 and 2601 and is an even composite number with prime factorization 2^3 × 5^2 × 13. In number theory contexts like the study of divisibility relevant to the Euclid-inspired analyses or the classification frameworks used by mathematicians such as Paul Erdős and Srinivasa Ramanujan, factors and divisor functions of 2600 appear in tabulations akin to those for numbers like 2400 and 2700. In modular arithmetic problems connected to congruences studied by Carl Friedrich Gauss or in examples appearing in textbooks referencing results by Leonhard Euler, 2600 can be used as a modulus or subject in residue class calculations. Recreational mathematics collections, similar to compendia influenced by figures like Martin Gardner or groups associated with American Mathematical Society, occasionally cite 2600 in puzzle lists or enumerative sequences.

Years

The numeral corresponds to calendrical markers used for both AD and BC designations and for future chronological planning. In discussions of long-range forecasting undertaken by institutions such as the United Nations or scenario planners from RAND Corporation, references to the year 2600 are hypothetical projections in studies concerning climate impacts, demographic shifts, or technological trajectories similar to those authored by researchers affiliated with Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change or futurists influenced by Alvin Toffler. In speculative fiction and worldbuilding works by authors like Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, or William Gibson, writers project social and technological states centuries ahead, and the year 2600 is used in timelines, canon genealogies, or setting anchors in franchises curated by entities such as Penguin Random House or Tor Books.

Technology and Computing

The numeric string 2600 appears in technical identifiers, model numbers, and protocol ports. In networking, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) assigns port numbers and service names in the manner analogous to assignments for ports like those used by Transmission Control Protocol and User Datagram Protocol services; the number 2600 is notable in hacker culture and in lists of ports maintained by organizations similar to Internet Engineering Task Force. Consumer electronics manufacturers such as Sony, Philips, and Panasonic use four-digit model numbers, and variants containing 2600 serve to designate specific models in product catalogs alongside series like those from Apple and Samsung. In historical computing, microprocessor families from firms like Intel, Motorola, and Zilog are cataloged with numeric suffixes and marketing model numbers that mirror the practice of numerical naming; peripheral devices and chipset revisions in the archives of companies like IBM and Commodore include entries with similar numeric patterns. Security researchers affiliated with institutions such as MIT and Stanford University reference port scanning and banner-grabbing artifacts in vulnerability case studies that cite specific ports and services in enumeration tables.

Media and Culture

The number features as a title and motif across magazines, music releases, visual art, and film. Underground periodicals and zines linked to hacker subculture and to movements documented alongside entities like Wired (magazine), 2600: The Hacker Quarterly has become emblematic in studies of subcultural publishing and has been chronicled in analyses alongside outlets such as Rolling Stone and The New Yorker. Musicians and bands occasionally use numerals in album or track titles in the tradition of artists represented by labels such as Columbia Records and Warner Music Group; concept albums by performers compared to David Bowie or Kraftwerk sometimes adopt numeric motifs to evoke futurism. Visual artists in galleries alongside exhibitors like Tate Modern and Museum of Modern Art employ numeric signs in installations and catalog entries, following precedents set by modernists profiled by institutions like Guggenheim Museum. Filmmakers and producers working with studios including Universal Pictures and Paramount Pictures sometimes use millennial dates or numeric titles to situate speculative narratives, an approach traceable to directors such as Stanley Kubrick and Ridley Scott.

Organizations and Publications

Several organizations and periodicals adopt four-digit identifiers in their names or catalog numbers. Independent presses and publication collectives in the mold of City Lights Booksellers & Publishers and McSweeney's issue serials and journals that use numerals to mark volumes or series; nonprofit advocacy groups and cultural associations modeled on Electronic Frontier Foundation and Free Software Foundation register projects that use numerical monikers for initiatives. Trade associations and standard-setting bodies similar to Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and International Organization for Standardization catalog specifications with numeric designations, and membership directories maintained by entities like American Library Association include call numbers and classification entries where sequences echo four-digit patterns. Academic journals housed at universities such as Harvard University and University of California press release numbered working papers and technical reports that employ numerals in their identifiers.

Miscellaneous Uses

The sequence appears in transportation route numbers, product SKUs, patent filings, legislation numeric identifiers, and catalog entries. Road and highway systems maintained by agencies comparable to United States Department of Transportation and Transport for London assign numeric designations; municipal transit routes and rail line codifications in systems like New York City Subway and London Underground use numbers that can include four-digit patterns in internal databases. Manufacturers across sectors—automotive firms such as Toyota, Ford Motor Company, and Volkswagen; appliance makers like Whirlpool—assign model codes and SKUs employing sequences resembling 2600. Patent offices following procedures from institutions like United States Patent and Trademark Office and European Patent Office index filings under numeric serials where similar strings may occur. In archival cataloging at libraries and museums such as Library of Congress and British Museum, accession numbers and catalog records include numeric blocks that mirror the use of four-digit identifiers in collection management.

Category:Numbers