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- From: bskendig@netcom.com (Brian Kendig)
- Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 09:41:38 PDT
- Subject: The Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List
-
-
- .__________.
- .__________________________________________________. | Contents |
- | | |================|
- | The Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List | . | Hardware |
- | compiled by Brian Kendig (bskendig@netcom.com) | . | System |
- | ____ | . | Other software |
- | Easter 1994 edition. | OK | | . | Useful tips . |
- | `----' | . `-------------|\-'
- `--------------------------------------------------' . |_\
- ................................................. (c)1994 bsk \
-
-
- Welcome to the Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List! An "easter egg"
- (sometimes known as a "cookie") is something amusing or otherwise
- nonproductive (like a picture, a song, or the developers' names) hidden
- in your computer. It won't appear unless you do some action you
- wouldn't normally do, so you can't find it unless you're lucky or you
- know what you're looking for.
-
- Some really clever About boxes are mentioned in this list too, and I've
- also included a few interesting, useful, and little-known tips further
- down that are really handy to know. The list is getting so long, though,
- that I've been weeding out some of the trivial or very esoteric tricks.
- Too many applications will bring up "secret" things if you hold down the
- right keys and click in the right places, so I'm only keeping the more
- interesting easter eggs around.
-
- Please report any corrections to me! And if you find a really good
- easter egg, then please tell me about it and I'll put your name in here.
-
- You may (of course!) distribute information about these tricks freely,
- but please note the copyright on this collection -- I really don't like
- when people try to pass it off as their own work. If you'd like to use
- this material in a book or newsletter or distribute it commercially on
- electronic media like disks or CD-ROMs, please contact me first for
- permission, and you'll get it. :-) It would also be nice to let me know
- if you're including this list in a users' group collection. So far,
- this list has been printed in the WAMUG (Australia) and BMUG
- newsletters, translated into Japanese and printed in the Japanese users'
- group "MuON" newsletter, used in the books "Maximizing your Mac" and
- "Voodoo Mac", and distributed on Nautilus and Pacific Hitech CD-ROMs.
-
- Thanks to the people who have written similar lists, from which I've
- gotten plenty of ideas: J. D. Sterling Babcock and Mike Kimura, among
- others. For additional help, I thank Paul Franklin and Seth Pettie.
- Rene Ros has contributed so much that he deserves special mention, too!
-
- The list has grown to such a size that I can't personally verify every
- trick here, so if you just can't get something to work, please tell me!
-
- If you want to skip forward to the "Useful Tips" section, have your
- software search for three asterisks ('***') now.
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- Hardware
-
- Macintosh Plus
-
- >From MacsBug or the interrupt debugger, enter "G 40E118" (that's a zero,
- not an oh). (To get into the interrupt debugger, press the button on
- the left side of your machine closer to the back. If you're running
- System 7, just Shut Down your machine, then while the "you may turn off
- your Macintosh safely" dialog is displayed, press the button.) This
- gives you a tiny "Stolen from Apple Computer" message in the upper
- left-hand corner of your screen.
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh SE
-
- >From MacsBug or the interrupt debugger, enter "G 41D89A". (See the
- trick above for info on how to get into the debugger.) This brings up a
- slideshow displaying four bitmap pictures of the Macintosh development
- team. Reboot (hit the button on the left side of the machine closer to
- the front, with the triangle on it) to get out of the endless cycle.
-
- Also, entering "G 4188A4" into the debugger gives you a tiny "Stolen
- from Apple Computer" message in the upper left-hand corner of your
- screen. [Contributed by J. D. Sterling Babcock.]
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh Classic
-
- Hold down Command-Option-x-o right after you turn on or reboot the machine.
-
- This starts up the Classic from a minimal ROM-disk which contains System
- 6.0.3, Finder 6.1x, and AppleShare. (This version of the System is not
- recommended for use with the Classic, so you probably shouldn't boot off
- it to do any important work.) If you look at the ROM-disk with a
- program able to see invisible files (like ResEdit or MacTools), you'll
- find a folder named "Brought to you by" hidden there, containing more
- hidden folders bearing the names of the Classic designers. (The keys
- `X' and `O' were chosen because the development name of the Classic was
- the "Mac XO", or was it OX?) Also, there's an invisible application in
- the System Folder named "Launch" and set as the startup application;
- anybody know what it does? [Thanks to Charles Gousha for the details.]
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh SE/30
-
- This trick requires that you have MacsBug installed. Press the
- interrupt switch to dump yourself into the system debugger, then use the
- command "dm 4082E853 20" to display a few bytes of memory from location
- 4082E853 onwards. The bytes there spell out, in ascii, "WHAT ARE YOU
- STARING AT?" [Contributed by Esa Ristila.]
-
- Also, type "g eb1000" into MacsBug or the interrupt debugger. This
- displays the "Macintosh SE/30 Engineering Hall of Fame". Entering
- "pc=e11000;g" works too. [Contributed by Aapo Puskala and Mark
- Gadzikowski.]
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh IIci
-
- Set the system date to 9/20/89 (the release date of the IIci), and set
- your monitor to 8-bit color. Restart while holding Command-Option-c-i.
- You'll see a color picture of the IIci design team. Click the mouse to
- continue. (Other color settings might also work...)
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh IIfx
-
- Set the system date to 3/19/90 (the release date of the IIfx), and
- restart while holding down Command-Option-f-x. You'll see a color
- picture of the IIfx design team. Click the mouse to continue.
- (Interestingly enough, this is the same picture used in the IIci.)
- [Thanks to Jeff Home for details.]
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh IIsi
-
- Enter the debugger and type "dm 4086F088 20". The bytes there spell out
- "SO...WHAT ARE YOU STARING AT? " [Contributed by Jeff Home.]
-
- ----------------
- Any Macintosh computer
-
- Every Mac will play interesting noises if it fails its internal RAM
- check. You can harmlessly force it to fail its check by pressing the
- Interrupt button on your system immediately after it starts booting up.
- Mac II systems play interesting chimes, Quadra AV's play drum solos,
- LC's play a flute, and the Power Macintoshes play a sound of a car wreck
- with glass breaking. [Contributed by Rick Warfield.]
-
- ----------------
- Macintosh ROMs (any of them)
-
- With a debugger, look at the last few locations on the ROM of your
- machine. Developers put their initials there, as well as the date that
- the ROM was linked. For example, the 128k ROM (Mac Plus) contains, at
- $41FFC0-$41FFFF:
-
- ALR ELR BA BMB EHB JTC SC DLD PWD KWK LAK SEL BWed, Nov 6, 1985
-
- which are the initials of Erich Ringewald, Bill Atkinson, Bill Bruffey,
- Ernie Beernik (sp?), Jerome Coonan, Steve Capps, Donn Denmann, Pat
- Dirks, Larry Kenyon, and three other unknown developers. [Contributed
- by Scott Lindhurst and Ed Tecot.]
-
- ----------------
- Apple Fax Modem
-
- While holding down the button on the front panel, turn on the modem.
- The modem will beep three times. After the three beeps, press the
- button again three times, timed exactly in "rhythm" with the beeps. If
- your timing is correct, the modem will speak the digitally-recorded
- voices of the three developers saying their names ("Peter, Alan, Neal").
- [Contributed by Neal Johnson and Alex Rosenberg.]
-
- ----------------
- StyleWriter
-
- When you turn on your printer, hold down the RESET and FORM FEED keys to
- print a diagnostic test page, which lets you exercise the print head and
- see if any of the pins are damaged. [Contributed by Tommy Aenst.]
-
- ----------------
- Newton Messagepad
-
- Write "About Newton" on your Messagepad, hilite it (hold the pen down
- until a large dot appears at its tip then draw a line across the words
- with it), then tap Assist. The names of all the Newton developers will
- appear.
-
- On the original Messagepad (now called the Messagepad 100), tap the
- clock in the lower left-hand corner of the display, and hold down on it.
- The display will show you the current temperature! (This is because the
- battery level indicator works by sensing temperature.)
-
- Go to the Map, tap "Find", then write "Elvis". It will briefly say "The
- King was sighted in" and choose a city name at random before it catches
- itself and says "not found". [All three of these were contributed by
- Scott Ryder.]
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- System
-
- ("7.0" means 7.0.0 or 7.0.1 and probably 7.1 also)
-
- Multifinder 1.0 (distributed with System Software prior to 6.0)
-
- Hold down Command and Option while selecting "About Multifinder" from
- the bottom of the Apple menu. A scrolling list of credits appears.
- [Contributed by Seth Theriault.]
-
- ----------------
- Multifinder 6.0
-
- Select "About Multifinder" and leave the dialog up for about an hour or
- more. (Yes, this means you can't use your machine meanwhile.) A
- message will appear:
-
- "I want my"
- "I want my"
- "I want my l--k and f--l"
-
- You can also see this message if you snoop around in the 'STR#'
- resources of Multifinder for a while with ResEdit. [Contributed by Tony
- Cooper and James Boswell.]
-
- ----------------
- System 6.0.7, 6.0.8, or 7.0
-
- Take a look through the data fork of the System File (with MacSnoop or
- MacTools, or open it with MS Word). (It's short.) The string "Help!
- Help! We're being held prisoner in a system software factory!" is in the
- data fork, with a list of the names of the Blue Meanies (the System 7
- developers). In System 7.1, the string is slightly different. "We're
- still being held prisoner..." [Contributed by Kevin Bolduan, Seth
- Theriault, and Tim Hammett.]
-
- ----------------
- System 6.0.7J (Kanjitalk)
-
- Set the clock to January 1, 1992 (or any year?), and restart. The
- startup screen says "Happy new year" in Japanese. [Contributed by Junio
- Hamano.]
-
- ----------------
- System 7.0
-
- With ResEdit, take a look at STR# resource -16415 in the System file.
- The first string in the resource reads "May you code in interesting
- times." [Posted to Usenet by Nigel Stanger.]
-
- Also, while running System 7, try renaming a disk to "Like Wow Man. HFS
- For 7.0!" (where the space after 'Man.' is actually an option-space;
- you'll have to type this somewhere else like the Notepad then cut/paste
- it into the disk name). Then eject the disk with Command-E, and double-
- click on the greyed-out disk icon. The Mac will ask you to please
- re-insert "HFS for 7.0 by dns and ksct". (The intials are of David
- N. Feldman and Kenny S. C. Tung, who wrote the HFS extensions for System
- 7.) Other disk names work, due to the way the name is checked; try
- "KMEG JJ KS" or "Hello world JS N A DTP". [Found by Francois Grieu and
- mentioned in TidBITS #143.]
-
- ----------------
- Finder 7.0
-
- Hold down Option while choosing "About This Macintosh". (The menu
- option changes to "About the Finder", and if balloon help is turned on,
- the balloon for it reads "Displays a dialog with the original Finder
- picture.") This brings up the original picture of the mountains from
- "About the Finder" in System 1.0. If the creation date of the invisible
- "Desktop Folder" is May 13, 1991 (System 7's release date) or later, the
- names of all the Finder developers through Mac and Lisa history also
- scroll by. Hold down Command-Option while choosing "About" to get a
- goofy-face cursor.
-
- Also, "Get Info" on an alias, turn on Balloon Help, and point to the
- icon's italicized name. Then point to a place right below the very
- beginning of the name; you'll have to hunt for the exact spot. The
- Balloon help on the italicized name reads "The underline indicates
- that..." And the Balloon Help on the little invisible point right below
- the beginning of the name reads "This is the system software version..."
- but there's nothing there. Oops. [Contributed by David Richardson and
- John Feinberg.]
-
- ----------------
- System 7 Tune-Up 1.1.1
-
- The owner resource of this third-Tune-Up release contains the question
- everybody asked when it was released: "Again?" [Contributed by Rene Ros.]
-
- ----------------
- Caches 7.0.1 (on a Quadra)
-
- Turn on balloon help and point to the version number; the balloon reads
- "Wink, wink." Option-clicking the version number makes the "040" icon
- whoosh to the side, revealing the name of the programmer who wrote it.
- [Contribued by Kemi Jona.]
-
- ----------------
- Caps Lock 7.0.1 (on a PowerBook 100, 140, 145, or 170)
-
- Turn on balloon help and point to the Caps Lock file icon. The balloon
- help reads: "This file allows your Macintosh TIM or Derringer to display
- an icon..." (These were the working names of the first PowerBooks;
- Apple forgot to change the extension before System 7.0.1 was released!
- Whoops.) [Contributed by Seth Theriault and Fabian Hahn.]
-
- ----------------
- Color Control Panel 7.0
-
- Click on the Sample Text a few times. The strings "by Dean Yu" "&
- Vincent Lo" alternate. Also, if you're running version 7.1 of the
- control panel, "& Don Louv" sneaks in there every sixteenth click.
- [Contributed by Don Louv.]
-
- ----------------
- Labels Control Panel 7.0
-
- Delete all the label names in the Labels control panel, and reboot. The
- labels are now "None," "a", "l", "a", "n", "j", "e", "f". (Who are Alan
- and Jef? Beats me...)
-
- ----------------
- Map Control Panel
-
- Type MID as the city name, and click Find. The stored point MID is
- actually "Middle of Nowhere", an insignificant location in the middle of
- the South Atlantic. (This one was added in version 7.0.)
-
- Clicking on the "7.0" puts "v7.0, by Mark Davis" into the city name
- field until you release the mouse button.
-
- Option-clicking on Find repeatedly will take you alphabetically to every
- city the Map knows.
-
- Opening the control panel while you hold down the shift key will display
- a magnified map (the resolution is the same, so it's very jagged).
- Opening it with option held down magnifies it more, and shift-option
- magnifies it even more to the point of being really blocky.
-
- Clicking somewhere in the map and dragging your pointer off the edge of
- it will scroll around the world.
-
- You can paste a new picture into the control panel; the Scrapbook that
- comes with System 7 includes a particularly good color map.
- [Contributed by Takeshi Miyazaki and Doc O'Leary.]
-
- ----------------
- Memory Control Panel 7.0 (on a machine capable of virtual memory)
-
- Turn on virtual memory and hold down Option while clicking on the pop-up
- menu used to choose a hard drive for your swapfile. This brings up a
- hierarchical pop-up menu with the names of the developers; each name
- points to a submenu with a few comments about the developer.
- [Contributed by Povl Hessellund Pedersen.]
-
- ----------------
- Monitors Control Panel
-
- Click the version number in the control panel window. A box will pop up
- with the names of the people who wrote Monitors. While you hold down
- the mouse button, tap Option several times; this makes the smiley face
- stick out its tongue. After tapping Option several times, the names
- begin to get rearranged and some first and last names get replaced with
- "Blue" or "Meanies". [Thanks to Steve Noskowicz for details.]
-
- ----------------
- Finder 7.0 and MacsBug
-
- Turn on Balloon Help and point to the MacsBug file. The balloon reads:
- "This file provides programmers with information proving that it really
- was a hardware problem..."
-
- ----------------
- QuickTime
-
- Turn on Balloon Help and point to the QuickTime file. The balloon
- reads: "time n. A nonspatial continuum in which events occur in
- apparently irreversible succession from the past to the present to the
- future." [Contributed by Kristopher Nasadowski.]
-
- ----------------
- Sound Control Panel 8.0.1
-
- Hold down Option and select something from the popup menu. You get a
- weird sound and a credits dialog. [Contributed by Bronson Trevor and
- Noah Salzman.]
-
- On a Quadra AV system, go into the Effects section of the Sound control
- panel and click on the wave icon in the lower right-hand corner of the
- window. It draws a line and the words "by Jeff Boone". [Contributed by
- bwooster@aol.com.]
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
- Other Software
-
- Adobe Illustrator 5.0
-
- Hold down Option while selecting the Tool Description box (in the lower
- left portion of the working window), and instead of the usual four
- choices, some new things appear: the number of shopping days until
- Christmas, the programmer's home phone number, a pair of eyes that watch
- the cursor, the phase of the moon, the number of mouse clicks since you
- opened the document, a random number, and so forth. [Contributed by
- David Darrow and Richard Foley.]
-
- ----------------
- AppleLink CD
-
- Select "About AppleLinkCD" and hold down the Option key. The spinning
- CD turns into a spinning cat's head. [Contributed by Brian Golden.]
-
- ----------------
- BBEdit 2.2
-
- Change your Chooser name (in the System 6 Chooser or the System 7
- Sharing Setup control panel) so that it contains "Mike" or "Michael",
- then hold down Option while you choose "About BBEdit...". Everyone in
- the About box will be given a first name of Mike, Michael, or something
- similar. [Contributed by Rich Siegel.]
-
- ----------------
- CompuServe Information Manager 2.0.2
-
- Click on the spinning earth in the About box, and hold the mouse button
- down. The earth spins in the other direction. Eventually, other windows
- will appear, giving credit to the authors. [Contributed by Rene Ros.]
-
- ----------------
- Dark Castle
-
- If you play the game on December 25 (or if you set your system's clock
- to that date, and play the game), a Christmas tree appears in the foyer.
- [Contributed by Philip Craig.]
-
- ----------------
- Disinfectant
-
- Select "About Disinfectant", and hold a menu down to pause the advancing
- virus names while the music plays (to prevent the foot from arriving too
- soon and stopping the music). John Norstad appears in one half of the
- dialog, while in the other half an animated sequence of virus names
- march out as the Monty Python theme song plays, until they get stomped
- by a huge foot. Holding down a menu pauses the viruses but not the
- music, and if you hold the menu down long enough, the entire theme song
- (John Philip Sousa's "Liberty Bell March") will play! (You may have to
- release the mouse button every now and then if the music does stop.)
- [Contributed by Dave Claytor and Mitchell Marmel.]
-
- ----------------
- Finale 2.x
-
- Select "About Finale" and wait for a few seconds. The conductor walks
- away. [Contributed by Arthur Rishi.]
-
- ----------------
- Fractal Forest (an After Dark 'Art of Darkness' module)
-
- Run this sometime around Christmas, and all the trees sprout Christmas
- ornaments. [Contributed by Phil Barrett.]
-
- ----------------
- FrameMaker
-
- Put the word "Interleaf" into a document, and spell-check it.
- FrameMaker will substitute "FrameMaker" wherever it finds "Interleaf".
- (Interleaf is FrameMaker's competition.) [Contributed by Erik Ableson.]
-
- ----------------
- HyperCard 2.x
-
- Hold down Option as you select "About Hypercard...". In 2.1, you get a
- dialog describing your system setup. In either 2.0 or 2.1, the chooser
- name, if you've entered one, appears in the "HyperCard by" title. (That
- is, if you entered "Joe Cool" as your name in the Chooser (6.0) or
- Sharing Setup (7.0), the top of the window will read "HyperCard by Joe
- Cool". If you have no Chooser name, one of the names of the many
- developers is put there.) Also, on any recent Mac (ones that require
- System 7.0.1 or 7.1), you will be told your system is a "Macintosh
- Macintosh". [Thanks to Seth Theriault for the details.]
-
- In the original release of HyperCard 2.0 (not 2.0v2), type "get 1/0"
- into the message box. Your Mac will crash with a "division by zero"
- error. Oops, talk about having full control over your computer!
-
- ----------------
- Installer
-
- On version 3.0.1 (the one that comes with System 6.0.7 and 6.0.8), after
- dismissing the initial welcome dialog, type "ski". A humorous list of
- the developers will appear, and you will be able to choose from five
- wait-cursors: the hand with the moving fingers (standard), a spinning
- globe, the familiar spinning disc, the even more familiar wristwatch,
- and dots that move. [Contributed by John DeRosa and John Hawkinson.]
-
- On version 3.2 (the one that comes with System 7), hold down command and
- option while the Easy Install screen is up. The Help button becomes
- "About", and clicking on it brings up a few screens of credits.
- [Contributed by Matthew Russotto.]
-
- ----------------
- Jam Session
-
- Choose "About Jam Session". The credits are displayed on the label of a
- record, and you can hear it click (as an old record does after it's
- played to the end). When you click the mouse to dismiss the dialog, you
- hear the scratching noise of the needle being lifted off the record.
- [Contributed by Joe Campbell.]
-
- ----------------
- MacPaint 2.0
-
- This only works on very early copies of MacPaint 2.0, before Claris
- caught it: Hold down Tab and Space while choosing "About MacPaint", and
- a bitmap of a well-known painting of a nude zebra-striped woman atop a
- white zebra appears.
-
- ----------------
- Maelstrom
-
- >From the main screen (after it loads), press 'L'. This brings up a
- level select. "Turbofunk mode" makes the game play as quickly as the
- hardware you're using can support.
-
- Pressing 'X' on the main screen brings up a rather interesting poem that
- I think is from a song.
-
- If you play it around Christmastime, Christmas-tree balls appear on the
- title screen. [Contributed by Rob Kouwenberg.]
-
- ----------------
- Metamorphosis Professional 2.0
-
- Hold down Command and Option while selecting "About Metamorphosis Pro".
- A screen proclaiming "Bug Tussle Professional, The Totally Awesome Font
- Conversion Utility" is displayed, along with a list of developers.
- [Contributed by David Loebell and Karl-Koenig Koenigsson; extra thanks
- to David for sending me a picture of it, too! :) ]
-
- ----------------
- Microsoft Excel 3.0
-
- Open a new spreadsheet, then go to the last cell, IV16384. (Press
- Cmd-Right then Cmd-Down to jump there.) Use the scroll bars to scroll
- down and right more until only that cell is showing, then set that
- cell's width and height both to 0. All that will remain in your window
- will be the little square in the upper-left-hand corner that you
- normally click on to select the entire spreadsheet; click on it. The
- contents of the window will be replaced by a little Lotus-stomping then
- a list of Excel's programmers and beta-testers. When your normal Excel
- window comes back, scroll away to keep the show from repeating.
- [Contributed by Evan Torrie.]
-
- Set the style of any cell to "excel" (by selecting "Format Styles..."
- and typing "excel" without the quotes). Then choose "About Excel..."
- from the Apple menu and click on the big Excel icon. A brief animation
- ("So good, it hurts.") appears, and alternates with the names of the
- developers ("Recalc or Die!"). [Contributed by Rob Griffiths.]
-
- On a color Mac running System 6, launch Excel while you hold down
- Shift-3-D. Excel's "tool bar" will have the System 7 "three-d" look to
- it, instead of looking boring and flat like it usually does under System
- 6. [Contributed by Randy Lambertus.]
-
- ----------------
- Microsoft Word
-
- On Word 3.01 or 4.x with the US dictionary (and maybe UK?), spellcheck
- the word "childcare". The spell-checker will suggest one word:
- "kidnaper" [sic]. [Contributed by Adam Shostack.]
-
- Also, try spellchecking "supression" [sic]. The spell-checker will
- include "Cupertino" among its choices. Could this be secret
- Apple-bashing? ;) [Contributed by Hiroki Morizono.]
-
- In Word 4.0, select "About Microsoft Word" and command-click on the Word
- icon. The resulting dialog gives the names of Word beta-testers.
-
- In Word 5.0, hold down Command and Shift as you select "Preferences"
- from the Tools menu. At the bottom of the preferences list will be a
- new item, Credits; select it to see listed the names of the Word 5
- developers. [Contributed by Jonathan Leblang.]
-
- ----------------
- Miracle Piano Software
-
- Work through a lesson on Christmas Day. It will "ho ho ho" at you when
- it evaluates your performance, and all bass clefs will be replaced by
- candy canes. [Contributed by Hank Shiffman.]
-
- ----------------
- Norton Utilities
-
- Command- or option-click the little rhomboid just in front of the
- version number in the About box. A list of the developers appears. (In
- 2.0, you get a great caricature.) [Contributed by Karl-Koenig
- Koenigsson and Larry Cunningham.]
-
- Also click on the man standing in front of the file tree. He holds up a
- flag in which scroll the names of everyone who worked on NU.
- [Contributed by Nabil Alatas.]
-
- In the Wipe program, version 2.0, option- or command-click on the
- rhomboid beside the version number in the About box. The cursor turns
- into a hand holding an eraser. Move it around the About box; zeroes are
- left in its wake. Fill the entire box with zeroes; a brief melody
- plays, and a picture of the developers appears. [Contributed by Larry
- Cunningham and Neil Corcoran.]
-
- In the Speed Disk program 1.0, command-click on the rhomboid beside the
- version number in the About box. The large letters that make up the
- name "SPEED DISK" swap themselves pair-by-pair until the name eventually
- unjumbles itself again. [Contributed by Andy Calder.]
-
- ----------------
- Out Of This World
-
- Take a closer look at the game's file "FILE0146" with a GIF viewer; it's
- really a GIF file containing a message from one of the game's authors.
- [Contributed by Darren Cokin.]
-
- ----------------
- Pagemaker 5.0
-
- Hold down Tab, Shift, and Space while you select "About PageMaker",
- and a nice picture will appear. [Contributed by srsimons@aol.com.]
-
- ----------------
- Quark XPress
-
- In version 3.1, turn on Balloon Help, select "About QuarkXPress", and
- point to the word 'Quark'. The balloon reads "A fundamental particle."
- [Contributed by Reuven Lerner.]
-
- In version 3.2, select a picture or text box with the Arrow Tool.
- Delete the box with Command-Option-Delete, and a little space alien
- walks out and zaps it away. [Contributed by David Darrow and Johnny Angel.]
-
-
- ----------------
- QuicKeys 2.x
-
- Open the macro definition window, and click on the logo to bring up a
- credits window. Wait for about half a minute, and a bunny will walk
- across the window beating a drum. After it crosses, the message
- "QuicKeys keeps on going!" is displayed. (There's also a way to get a
- safe to drop on the bunny, but I don't know how. Anybody have any
- ideas?) [Contributed by Kenny Wong.]
-
- ----------------
- ResEdit 2.x
-
- Hold down Shift, Option, and Command as you choose "About ResEdit." You
- get the chance to enter "pig mode" (oink oink oink). When you put
- ResEdit into pig mode, resources will be compacted and purged each time
- ResEdit goes through its event loop (several times a second). (However,
- since this makes ResEdit slower, it's not of much use outside Apple.)
- [Contributed by Ian Neath; info about "pig mode" from Chris Webster and
- Russell Street.]
-
- Also, just try holding down only command and option as you choose "About
- ResEdit"; this brings up credits for ResEdit. (as in who made ResEdit,
- not as in Star Trek money)
-
- ----------------
- SimCity, and the other Maxis "Sim" games
-
- Type the word "FUND" in SimCity, and you will be given a few thousand
- dollars for free.
-
- Type the word "FUND" in SimLife, and the game will tell you "You are now
- $10,000 richer. Unfortunately, money has no value in this game."
- [Contributed by stewarpj@bigvax.alfred.edu.]
-
-
- ----------------
- Simple Player (for QuickTime) 1.0
-
- Hold down Option as you select "About Simple Player...". The two movie
- frames now have greyscaled cats in them. [Contributed by Scott Ryder.]
-
- ----------------
- SoundEdit
-
- Choose "About SoundEdit". A burning fuse bomb "system error" blows up.
-
- ----------------
- Spaceward Ho! 3.0
-
- A ship with weapons, shields, and range all at 10 looks like a shark.
- One with all three up to 13 looks like a skeleton.
-
- Name a planet "Hope" or "Ship", then abandon it; you get a cute message
- about "abandoning hope" or "abandoning ship".
-
- Play the game on December 25 (or set your system clock to 12/25 and
- play), and the game will have a Christmastime theme. [Posted to Usenet
- by Gene Hsu, David Mika, and Adam Nash.]
-
- ----------------
- Spectre
-
- When playing the game, type the three letters G-O-D in sequence. You
- are treated to a bird's-eye view of the entire battlefield at once.
- [Contributed by Jeff Ivler.]
-
- ----------------
- SpeedyFinder 1.5
-
- Use ResEdit to look at the 'YeHa' resources in the control panel. Some
- comments are hidden there, including the text "Tell me what you're doing
- looking at my resource fork?" [Contributed by Rene Ros.]
-
- ----------------
- SpInside Macintosh and the Technical Notes (4.1.4 and others?) stacks
-
- Option-Shift-click on the dogcow. A dialog comes up with credits. When
- "Developer Technical Support" appears, click to dismiss the dialog.
- Then click anywhere else on the title screen. Click on the button to go
- to a tech note by number, and enter "Clarus the dogcow says Moof!" When
- it asks you "what did you say?", enter the same thing again. This will
- display the secret "Tech Note #31, About the Dogcow". (I'm not making
- this up; it's really in there!)
-
- If that doesn't work, then you can display the three pages of the Tech
- Note by typing "tnpict MooF1,1,0" in the message box (and MooF2 and
- MooF3). [Contributed by Brian Gaeke, Trevden, and Olav Brinkmann.]
-
- ----------------
- TeachText 1.1, 1.2, and 7.0
-
- Hold down the option key while you select "About TeachText..." Some
- "Thanks to" credits appear. [Contributed by Andrew Stoffel.]
-
- ----------------
- THINK Pascal 4.0
-
- Click in the lower left-hand corner of the About box. "THINK Pascal"
- will fade through a few amusing anagrams of itself. [Contributed by
- Rich Siegel.]
-
- Also, use ResEdit to look at the ICON resources; ICON #128 "THINK
- Pascal" is joined by ICON #129 "sPINacH TalK" and ICON #130 "PlaN sIT
- HacK". [Contributed by Fokko Dijkstra.]
-
- ----------------
- THINK Reference
-
- In the entry for "FindWindow", go to the "Returns" section; the note for
- "inDrag" mentions parenthetically "transvestites take note".
-
- You can enter "Dogcow" in the text box to go to an amusing page about it.
-
- Go to the page about the 'itlc' resource (search for the text "the
- 'itlc'" then press Command-Period) then go one more page forward, and
- you will reach a page of programming tips.
-
- Also, let the application sit for about twenty minutes, then look at it;
- the "thinking man" eventually gets tired and rests his chin on his other
- hand. The length of time it takes before he gets tired is controlled by
- 'Draw' resource 128 ("I'm bored after # secs"). [Contributed by Omar
- Souka, and posted to Usenet by John Brewer.]
-
- ----------------
- Vette!
-
- Select course 3 (starting on the Bay Bridge), but turn around and go
- _backwards_ for a ways (with the wall on your left and the ocean on your
- right, and traffic coming at you -- be careful!). After you've gone far
- enough, you will suddenly be in a very nicely-detailed area whose
- streets are named after the developers.
-
- ----------------
- WriteNow 2.2 and 3.0
-
- Select "About WriteNow", then option-click on the About dialog. Little
- men run out and change all the letters one-by-one.
-
- Trun on balloon help and point to the WriteNow 3.0 application icon.
- The balloon reads "This is the hottest WYSIWYG word processor
- around. It's blindingly fast. Try it...". [Contributed by Mark Cornick.]
-
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- ***
- Useful Things
-
-
- The Macintosh LC and Macintosh IIsi don't have restart and interrupt
- buttons like other Macs, so to generate these signals from the keyboard,
- press Command-Control-Power (the key with the triangle on it) for
- "reset" and just Command-Power for "interrupt." This also works with
- other newer Macs such as the IIvx.
-
- If your computer (under 7.0 or later only) seems to have crashed or
- frozen up, or is taking WAY too long to finish doing some task that it
- won't let you interrupt, press Command-Option-Escape. This will
- sometimes bring up a dialog that reads "Force 'application' to quit?
- Unsaved changes will be lost." The dialog has two buttons, "Force Quit"
- and "Cancel". Sometimes, clicking on "Force Quit" will kill the active
- application, allowing you to continue using your Mac without having to
- restart. Take advantage of this to save your other work and restart
- your Mac as soon as you can, because a crashed application might have
- trashed other things in memory. Use this at your own risk! Sometimes
- it won't work, but if your machine's hung, it could come in handy.
-
- If you quit all your open applications then use Command-Option-Escape to
- kill the Finder too, the Finder will come right back to life again --
- but if you're holding down Command and Option as it's doing so, you can
- rebuild the desktop files on your hard drives. This is sometimes more
- convenient then holding down Command and Option while your machine's
- booting up. (Thanks to Alan Gordon for reminding me of this trick.)
-
- If you want to make some windows invisible because they're cluttering up
- your screen too much, you can use "Hide Application" or "Hide Others"
- from the Application menu at the top right of your screen. But if you
- want to hide the windows of the application you're using right now, just
- hold down the option key and click in another program's window; as you
- switch to that other application, this one's windows will disappear.
- Option-clicking on the desktop hides the windows and puts you into the
- Finder, which is handy.
-
- If you want to see precisely how much memory an application is using (as
- opposed to just how much is allocated to it), then bring up the "About
- this Macintosh" dialog and turn on Baloon Help. Point to one of the
- bars, and the baloon will say "This application is using xxx k out of
- the xxx k allocated to it." (Contributed by Georg Schwarz)
-
- To zap the PRAM (reset all of your Mac's internal settings): Under
- System 7, hold down Control-Option-P-R on a reboot. Under System 6,
- hold down Command, Option, Shift, and Tab while you select the Control
- Panel DA from the Apple menu. (Is this great, or what? ;-)
-
- In the Apple HD SC Setup program, press Command-I to manually select a
- format interleave ratio for your hard drive. [Contributed by J. D.
- Sterling Babcock.]
-
- In Disk First Aid, press Command-S to display a window that shows you in
- detail exactly what the program's doing.
-
- In ResEdit, if you want to see exactly what's happening when ResEdit is
- verifying a file, then hold down Option while you click on "Open" in the
- "Verify" file selection dialog box. [Contributed by Quinn.]
-
- The Installer can be used to de-install things! Click on "Customize",
- and when you hold down the Option key, the "Install" button becomes
- "Remove", allowing you to de-install whatever the Installer would
- normally have installed for you. [Contributed by Seth Theriault and
- Fred Condo.]
-
- If you want to eject a floppy disk at any time (even if your Mac doesn't
- notice that there's a disk in the drive), press Command-Shift-1 for the
- lower (or internal) drive or Command-Shift-2 for the upper (or external)
- drive. (If you press these when there's no disk in the drive, you might
- even be able to hear the drive mechanism moving.) If that doesn't work,
- reboot your Mac and immediately hold down the mouse button until the
- disk ejects. If THAT still won't work, unbend a paperclip and (very
- carefully!) push it straight into the small hole to the right of the
- drive slot to manually force the mechanism to eject. If things still
- really feel stuck, then DON'T FORCE the mechanism; your disk might be
- caught in the drive, and forcing things could damage your drive. Bring
- your Mac in for repairs.
-
- You can unmount and eject a disk at any time without having to drag it
- to the Trash by just selecting it and pressing Command-Y instead.
- [Contributed by Rich Rauch.]
-
- If you have more than one monitor hooked up, go into the Monitors
- control panel and hold down Option. A smiley-face will appear on the
- screen placement area for whichever monitor currently has the menu bar
- on it; you can drag the menu bar to other monitors. [Contributed by Seth
- Theriault.]
-
- Option-clicking on "Options..." in the Monitors control panel will let
- you set the gamma correction on your monitor. Gamma correction is used
- to help colors look less washed-out.
-
- If you have a Quadra and you want to turn the caches on or off
- immediately (instead of having to reboot first), hold down Option as you
- click on either button. However, this could have bad side-effects (such
- as messing up LocalTalk timing) until you reboot your system.
-
- If you're running System 7 on a slow machine (a Plus, SE, or Classic),
- there's a way you _might_ be able to get things to run just a bit
- faster. Many System file and Finder resources are stored in compressed
- form to save disk space, but of course the tradeoff is that it takes
- time to decompress them before they can be used. With ResEdit,
- carefully copy all the resources in the System file or the Finder and
- paste the resources back in on top of themselves (use the same ID's),
- and save your work; this effectively decompresses all the resources for
- good (because ResEdit can't save compressed resources). DO THIS AT YOUR
- OWN RISK -- you'll certainly want to have clean copies of your System
- and Finder around for a while after you do this, just in case.
-
- If you need to fit the System 7.0 printer drivers on an 800k System
- 6.0.5 (or .7 or .8) boot disk (for example, to use an old Mac without a
- hard drive on a network with System 7 machines), you can use ResEdit to
- remove enough resources from the "LaserWriter" 7.0 driver to make it
- fit. (As usual, do this at your own risk.) These resources, which are
- only useful in System 7 or with the TrueType INIT, are:
-
- All of types icl4, icl8, ics4, ics8, hwin, hdlg, dctb
- POST -8150 to -8084
- STR# -8192 to -8182, -8138 to -8136, -5694
-
- If you like playing with the Puzzle desk accessory (and even if you
- don't), you can copy the picture of two linked squares from the
- Scrapbook and paste it into the Puzzle. In fact, you can paste any
- picture into the Puzzle, and it will be sized to fit. You can also copy
- the picture from the Puzzle and look at the clipboard to see what it
- will look like solved. [Contributed by Povl H. Pedersen.]
-
- QuickTime has a nice undocumented feature: you can name a movie file to
- "Startup Movie" and put it in the System Folder, and it will be played
- on startup when QuickTime loads. In international system software this
- name will be different (in Swedish it's "Startfilm"); you can find the
- name it uses in STR resource -2020. [Contributed by Jim Kelm and
- Mattias Ericson.]
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-
-
-