"Name that compiler"

Looks like people send many names in the contest,
so shall I do too.

I propose "Lepton", loosely meaning light (featherweight) in Greek.
It is used in particle physics to refer to very light particles (electrons, muons).

For me it also has the connotations of fastness and
restlessness (in the LLVM sense of post-compile
optimization).

See more at: Lepton - Wikipedia

Cheers,

  Gabor

Here is the patch as per newest rules:

[Gabor-Greifs-Computer:~/Documents] ggreif% diff -u Name.html.orig Name.html
--- Name.html.orig 2007-04-14 18:11:19.000000000 +0200
+++ Name.html 2007-04-14 18:10:28.000000000 +0200
@@ -298,12 +298,17 @@
        <td>Often refers to diamonds, but historically can mean
          any hard, "unbreakable" stone, metal or other substance.
      </td></tr>
- <tr><td>Gabor Greif</td><th>Otimo</th><td>It is a Portuguese word,
+ <tr><td rowspan="2">Gabor Greif</td><th>Otimo</th><td>It is a Portuguese word,
          meaning optimal, perfect. It is also different enough from plain English words
          to give a distinguished feel :slight_smile: and catch the eyes. The domains
          otimo.org and otimo.info are both available. Last, but not least
          it is a boon to the several LLVM developers of Portuguese
          tongue.</td></tr>
+ <tr><th><a href="Lepton - Wikipedia
+ meaning light (featherweight) in Greek. It is used in particle physics to refer to
+ very light particles (electrons, muons).<br/>
+ For me it also has the connotations of fastness and restlessness (in the LLVM sense
+ of post-compile optimization).</td></tr>
      <tr><td>Owen Anderson</td><th>Warloc<br/>
           <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warlock&quot;&gt;Warlock&lt;/a&gt;
         </th><td>It can be thought
[Gabor-Greifs-Computer:~/Documents] ggreif%

Cheers,

  Gabor