The first of these was first published by G. E. Thomas in 1949 and is followed by numerous authors (e.g., Andy Tanenbaum).
Manchester | Manchester United F.C. | University of Manchester | Morse code | Manchester City F.C. | Greater Manchester | Manchester, New Hampshire | Melissa Manchester | Internal Revenue Code | Manchester Metropolitan University | Victoria University of Manchester | The Chicago Code | The Da Vinci Code | Manchester Ship Canal | Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code | ZIP code | BBC Radio Manchester | source code | Salford, Greater Manchester | Manchester Phoenix | Liverpool and Manchester Railway | International Code of Zoological Nomenclature | Leigh, Greater Manchester | Manchester Metrolink | Manchester Evening News | Manchester Cathedral | DVD region code | Criminal Code of Canada | University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology | Uniform Code of Military Justice |
According to Embedded Systems magazine the Exatron Stringy Floppy used Manchester encoding, achieving 14K read-write speeds and the code controlling the device was developed by Li-Chen Wang (who also wrote a Tiny BASIC, the basis for the TRS-80 Model I Level I BASIC.)