2600

2600 Hz is the frequency in hertz (cycles per second) that AT&T formerly put as a steady signal on any long-distance telephone line that was not currently in use.

At one point in the 1960s, packets of the Cap'n Crunch breakfast cereal included a free premium: a small whistle that (by coincidence) generated a 2600 hertz signal. By dialing a number and then blowing the whistle, you could fool the phone company into thinking the line was not being used while, in fact, you were now free to make a call to any destination in the world. The hacker Captain Crunch adopted his nickname from this whistle.

2600_hertz

2600 is also a Hacker magazine.

Wikipedia:2600:_The_Hacker_Quarterly