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- Secret Screens, Part 2
- by Michael J Miller
- Courtesy of PC Magazine
-
-
- Secret screens are everywhere. Since I wrote about the ones
- in Microsoft Windows 3. 1, Word for Windows 2.0, and Ami
- Pro 2.0 in our August issue, I've received lots of letters from
- readers sharing the ones they've found, and also from some
- who don't like the whole concept.
- Many readers have discovered that the trick of dis-
- playing the four figures in Windows 3.1 works not only
- from Program Manager, but from most of Windows'
- applets as well. And a number of readers described this
- Windows 3.0 trick: First, minimize all your applications,
- hold down F3 while typing WIN3, release F3, then press
- the backspace key to get a list of the Windows 3.0 devel-
- opers. But only Will Musgrove of Chatham, Illinois,
- wrote in with the Windows 2.x sequence that does the
- same trick: Hit Fl, F5, F9, F4, Backspace.
- One of the first letters I received was the most com-
- plete. Mark Shook of Oklahoma City submitted a long
- list of Windows doodads for Windows 3.0, Word for
- Windows, The Norton Desktop for Windows, Visual
- Basic, Excel, and hDC's family of applications.
- He was the first person to unveil Excel 4.0's secret.
- First, make the Standard Tool Bar visible. Then, right-
- mouse-click on it, click the Customize option, and select
- Custom from the Categories list box. Drag the Solitaire
- icon (a pack of cards, top row) to any empty spot on
- the Standard Toot Bar. Under Assign to Tool, click OK,
- then Close. Now hold the Ctri, Alt, and Shift keys and
- click on the newly added Solitaire icon. You'll see
- an Excel logo clean up after a buggy replica of the
- Lotus 1-2-3 logo.
- The most frequently cited secret screen was the
- one in Excel 3.0. Readers pointed out several varia-
- tions on this one from E.W. Mandoky of Venice,
- California. They all start with moving to the last cell
- in the worksheet by hitting F5 and typing "ivl6384."
- Use the scroll bars to make sure that the last row and
- column are the only ones visible. Adjust the row
- height and column width to zero so that the Select
- All Cells button is the only button on screen to the bottom
- of the screen, crushing the 1-2-3 logo.
-
- FROM AGGRESSIVE TO MILD
- Considering Excel's repeated attacks on 1-2-3, and
- Word for Windows' attack on WordPerfect, Microsoft
- is the most aggressive developer of secret screens. All
- of the other screens I've seen are mild in comparison.
- Mr. Musgrove also noted the secret screen in Win-
- dows Write 3.0. With a new document open, hold down
- the Ctrl key while you right click in the "Page 1" area
- at the bottom of the screen. Then select About Write
- in the help menu. The dialog box proceeds to fill up
- with balloons.
- Here's another one he found in Word for Windows
- I.x: Pull down the Format menu and select Define
- Styles. In the dialog box, click on Options to bring up
- additional controls. Enter Normal in the Based On box,
- which will cause an error box to appear. Click on OK
- to clear the error, then click on Cancel. From the Help
- Menu, select About, and with CapsLock on, hold down
- the 0, P, U, and S keys. Release them and the box turns
- into a fireworks display with the names of the developers
- scroll by. In fact, the primary goal of most of these
- secrets is to list the application's development staff.
- hDC's FileApps, Power Launcher,and Windows Express share this
- secret in another tip from Mr. Shook. Select the About
- box from the Help menu. A little animation appears.
- Press the Ctrl and Shift keys while double-clicking
- on the star at the end of the animation and a list of
- credits appears. David B. O'Donnell of Providence, Rhode
- Island notes that pressing Shift and Ctrl while clicking
- on the icon in the Amish Desk utility of Amish Utilities
- for Windows displays a credits graphic with fireworks.
- Robert Myers of Kansas City, Missouri, offers this
- CorelDRAW 3.0 (Revision B) tip: If you pull up the About
- screen and hold the Ctrl and Shift keys while double-click-
- ing on the Corel balloon icon, you'll see a new screen with
- a balloon at the bottom. Next, hold down the left mouse button,
- and the balloon will start to rise, towing a banner listing the
- Corel developers. Release the button, and the balloon starts to sink.
- From Robert Stone of Schodack Landing, New York: If you go
- into the Program Manager and change the icon for IRMA
- Workstation for Windows' EMU.EXE, your choices include a
- picture of someone he suspects is the lead programmer.
- Several readers pointed out the secret screen in The Norton
- Desktop for Windows. From the Help menu, select About. Hold
- down the N, D, and W keys and click two or three times on the
- NDW icon. Photos of the NDW development team appear,along with
- a few quotes from the group displayed in the title bar. But only
- Shawn Wallack of New York City discovered that you can enlarge
- the individual images by drawing a box around one of the
- developers and clicking with the left mouse button. The
- right mouse button restores the screen.
- I'm not sure what to make of this tip from Greg Carroll
- of Huntsville, Alabama: In Procomm Plus for Windows, there's
- a credits screen readily available from the About box. Move
- your cursor into the credits screen and a cartoon face pops up.
- Peter S. Young of Mill Valley, California found the following
- secret in the About box of Calera's WordScan Plus. The screen dis-
- plays the box cover, and by clicking on the left or right red squares
- in "Calera" or in the purple "O" in OCR, you'll see a list of
- contributors. But if you click on the copyright symbol, your PC
- performs Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyries." Can multimedia
- secret screens be far behind?
- Lest you think all this activity is confined to Windows, Sherwin
- Zadeh of Los Angeles found an IBM OS/2 2.0 screen.
- Minimize all your programs and hold Ctrl, Shift, Alt, and the letter
- 0. A beach scene (Boca Raton?) is displayed along with the
- names of the OS/2 developers.
- Like so much in the PC world, secret screens seem to have
- started out on the Macintosh platform. On the Mac Ilci, if you
- set the date to the date of the machine's introduction and hold
- down command-Cl. you'll see a full-color picture of the develop-
- ment team. And if you had an original Macintosh, the secret wasn't
- in the software. Instead, the names of the development team
- were inscribed on the inside of the case.
-
- THE CASE AGAINST SECRET SCREENS
- As you can see, plenty of readers shared the secret screens they found,
- but a few readers were offended by the idea of software developers
- taking up users' disk space and memory to bide these secrets.
- As several readers mentioned, in most cases, the secret screen code
- stays on disk until it is accessed by a certain sequence of events,
- but there has to be some space devoted to recognizing when those
- events occur. Many readers thought that developers should all
- have a simple, easily accessible credits screen instead of all these
- hidden secrets.
- In a practical sense, they're right. Creating secret screens takes
- developer time, and the resulting code needs disk space and of-
- ten a little memory. But software is still as much art as science, and
- I suspect we'll be seeing secret screens for a long time.
-
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