home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1992-12-30 | 52.7 KB | 1,544 lines |
- I don't monitor the Mac, Amiga, or many of the other groups which support
- some of the non-PC products mentioned in this list. Readers are welcome to
- repost this document to those newsgroups (or anywhere else); if there's
- enough interest I can add other groups to the distribution list.
-
- Recipients are encouraged to redistribute this file to anyone who requests
- a copy, including BBS and archive sites. I cannot offer it by anonymous
- ftp and my employer would prefer that I not be inundated with requests
- to mail out copies.
-
- Joe Morris / MITRE
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= begin included text =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- ***** E A S T E R E G G H U N T R E S U L T S *****
-
- Collected from various sources; the names in each entry show where
- I got the info, which may or may not be where the egg was first
- discovered. As usual, should you be killed or captured ... oops,
- wrong tape. No warranties, express or implied; your milage may
- vary, and there may be weather tomorrow. Contributions of additional
- Easter Eggs gleefully accepted and will be posted on a totally random
- basis; please send them to jcmorris@mitre.org
-
- If the submitter prefers to remain anonymous, contributions will be merged
- without the associated name. (Translation: vendor staff submissions are
- solicited...)
-
- Entries may be edited for clarity, consistency, and whatever I feel like
- on any given morning.
-
- This listing may be redistributed without limitation. No copyright is
- claimed on its contents, but suitable credit for both the individual
- entries and the compilation would be appropriate.
-
- Last update: 12/28/92
- --------------------------------------------------
- Recent additions:
-
- Corel Draw! 3.0
-
- Windows applications:
- PageMaker 4, Aldus Table Editor
-
- OS/2:
- Followup comment on the developer's name list in OS/2
- Lockup option
-
- acorn Archimedes:
- Info on the results of certain SYS calls in RISC-OS
- Additional Easter eggs in RISC-OS
-
- Commodore PET:
- Poke to get many lines saying "MICROSOFT!"
-
- None of the Above:
- MVP Rasterizer cards
- Maxis simulations (SimCity, SimAnt, SimEarth, A-Train)
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Windows 3.0
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: unknown
-
- Press and hold F3
- Type the four characters WIN3
- Release F3
- Hit the backspace key
-
- The display can be cleared by pressing the left mouse button.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Windows 3.1
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Tom Tanida (tanida@esosun.css.gov)
-
-
- 1. Hold down Cntl and Shift simultaneously (keep holding them down for all
- of the following steps).
- 2. Select Program Manager's Help menu option, and select "About Program
- Manager".
- 3. When the box pops up, double click inside one of the four panes in the
- Windows 3.1 logo.
- 4. Click OK.
- 5. Repeat steps 2-4 to see a flag waving.
- 6. Repeat steps 2-4 again to see the credits. (Is that a picture
- of Bill Gates there? :-) )
-
- (Note: my tests indicate that if you try this a third time you'll
- get nothing; try it a fourth time and you're back at the waving
- flag. jcm)
-
- The display terminates immediately when the OK button is pressed (step 4).
-
-
- Some followup to the Windows 3.1 egg, from contributions by:
-
- Mark Scase (coa44@seq1.keele.ac.uk)
- Jill Patterson (bytor@milton.u.washington.edu)
- JT Anderson (jta@locus.com)
- Andrew Turner (act@softserver.canberra.edu.au)
-
- You don't have to be in Program Manager to do this. It seems to
- work in any "About" box of an application provided with Windows
- 3.1 (eg file manager, write, paintbrush, clock etc).
-
- The character appearing in the graphic with the name scroll changes each
- time you see it; there are four distinct figures:
-
-
- a bald man (Steve Ballmer)
- a man with a beard and dark hair (Brad Silverberg),
- a man with glasses and fair hair (Bill Gates), and
- a Teddy bear...apparently the logo of bugs@microsoft
-
- The Bear is a Microsoft euphemism for someone who comes along and bonks
- programmers for introducing bugs into test code(as in Smokey the Bear, who
- crushes your butts). The concept of the Bear is so much a part of debugging
- at Microsoft that certain, undcoumented functions used for testing Windows
- components such as USER.EXE are named things like Bear351."
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Excel 3.0 for the PC
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Aaron Wallace (aaron@jessica.Stanford.EDU) who credits Computer
- Currents for the info
-
- Formula Goto the *last* cell: IV16384
- Scroll until this is the only cell visible, in the upper left corner of the
- screen.
- Set its row height and column width to 0
- Double click on the little button in the upper left corner.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Excel 4.0 for the PC
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Phil Wherry (psw@maestro.mitre.org)
-
- Go to the tool bar and right click.
- Choose customize
- Now choose custom in the dialog
- Drag the solitaire icon off to the excel desktop somewhere
- close the dialog box
- Now, with the control and shift down click the solitaire icon
- Keep the keys down to see names...
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Excel 3.0 for the Mac
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Arthur Evans (ae@sei.cmu.edu)
-
- Under Excel 3.0: Open a new worksheet and select a cell. Using STYLE in
- the FORMAT menu, give it style EXCEL. Open the About... menu from the
- Apple menu click in the Excel symbol. Keep waiting -- there are two
- screens.
-
- --------------------------------------------------
- Product: Word for Windows, v1.1
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Todd Lutz (tlutz@hpdmd48.boi.hp.com)
-
- Here is a hidden feature of Word for Windows:
- 1. Turn CAPS LOCK on.
- 2. Choose Format, Define Styles, Options.
- 3. In the Based On field, select Normal.
- 4. You will get an error message, select OK.
- 5. Select Cancel.
- 6. Select Help, About.
- 7. Make sure your mouse cursor is inside the help box, then press the
- following four keys all at the same time: OPUS
-
- You should get some fireworks with the authors names scrolling on the
- screen.
-
- --------------------------------------------------
- Product: Word for Windows, v2.0
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: nancyb@ryko.enet.dec.com (nancy b.)
-
- To see some cute animation, a not-so-subtle jab at WordPerfect,
- and a list of those responsible for "wizardry", "quality",
- etc... on the Word for Windows 2.0 project:
-
- 1) Start WfW 2.0.
- 2) In the Tools menu, click on Macro.
- 3) For the Macro Name, type spiff [stop the macro recorder -- jcm]
- 4) Click on Edit.
- 5) Delete the lines Sub MAIN and End Sub
- 6) In the File menu, choose Close.
- 7) You will be asked if you want to save the changes.
- Click on Yes.
- 8) In the Help menu, click on About.
- 9) Click on the Word icon in the upper left, and enjoy ;-).
-
- If you have high resolution drivers, you might not see that awful
- green WordPerfect monster or the little people jumping up and
- down in glee after they make it go away. If all you see is the
- fireworks with the credits rolling in the foreground, then this
- is the case. Change to a lower resolution (800x600 or 640x480)
- driver to see the first part also.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Other Windows applications on a PC
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- --------------------
- Application: PageMaker 4 for Windows
- --------------------
-
-
- Source: Peter Reece (REECE@camins.Camosun.BC.CA)
-
- There is an egg in Pagemaker 4 as follows:
- 1. Depress and continue to hold shift-control
- 2. Open 'Help', 'About PM4'
- A list of PageMaker authors and contributors will appear
-
- There is also an Egg in Aldus's Table Editor as follows:
- 1. Depress and continue to hold shift-control
- 2. Open 'Help", 'About TableEdit"
- A list of TableEditor authors and contributors will appear
-
- --------------------
- Application: Solitaire game distributed with Windows
- --------------------
-
- Source: Joe Robison (joero@microsoft.com)
-
- From: pfeil@enuxha.eas.asu.edu (Hank Pfeil-Alumnus)
- >
- >Here's a neat trick you can play on your computer: Start "Solitaire"
- >... Now, if the card game only had a cheat mode....
-
- There is. If you're playing "Draw Three" you can hold down
- Ctrl+Alt+Shift and click on the deck to draw single cards
- (just don't hit the Del key!)
-
- --------------------
- Application: Norton Desktop for Windows 2.0
- --------------------
-
- Source: Rich Santalesa and David Harvey's column in 6/92 _Computer_Shopper_
-
- With NDW 2.0 in the foreground, hold down the N, D, and W keys, then click
- HELP -> ABOUT, then double-click on the Symantec icon in the upper left
- corner. The response is a group of photos of the NDW development team,
- plus a scrolling title bar with quotes from Shakespeare.
-
- In a followup, Brian Downing (bdowning@fordmulc.bitnet) says:
-
- Just choose HELP|ABOUT and then double click on the icon to make
- symantec disappear, then press the N,D,&W keys.
-
- In another followup, Mark Scase (mos11@cus.cam.ac.uk) adds:
-
- Whilst in the desktop, click on help about. Press N, D and W at the
- same time and double click on the icon in the about box.
-
- A window pops up containing 15 black and white pictures of people with
- the status bar entitles NDW Development Team. This title scrolls to
- the left and is replaced with the following (it takes a time for it all
- to scroll past):
-
- VIPER TEAM: Yet another great truth I record in my verse, that some
- vipers are venomous, some the reverse (Hilaire Belloc)
- ENRIQUE & PETER: A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds
- (Emerson)
- MARK: An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose
- time has come (Victor Hugo)
- MICHAEL: You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one (John Lennon)
- DOUG: As you already knew, this is the wave of the future! (NDW)
- MANSHAN: Very ingenious/important product enhancement realized! (Anonymous)
- SUE: I want you all to stonewall it (Richard Nixon)
- RENEE: What you achieve depends on what you settle for (Anonymous)
- BILL: Fame, fame, fatal fame, it can play hideous tricks on the brain, but
- still I'd rather be famous than righteous or holy any day, any day, any
- day (Morrissey)
- Congratulations Bruce & Vickie!!!! (The Gang)
-
- --------------------
- Application: Procomm Plus for Windows
- --------------------
-
- Source: Joseph Malloy (jmalloy@ITSMAIL1.HAMILTON.EDU)
-
- 1) From the Window menu, select Monitor
- 2) Keep the focus on the monitor (i.e., make sure monitor is active, not
- the Procomm Plus terminal window)
- 3) type GO DATASTORM! (case doesn't appear to matter, but the
- exclamation mark is necessary; you'll probably hear beeps as the system
- tells you this is an error)
- 4) Choose Help/About/Credits: instead of the usual list of names, you
- should see a nice color picture of, I assume, the primary developers.
-
-
- --------------------
- Application: AMI Pro
- --------------------
-
- Source: AVINOAM SHMUELI (s8276758@phobos.ucc.umass.edu), quoting from
- 8/92 issue of _PC_ Magazine
-
- Go to the About box under the Help menu and hold down the Shift, Ctrl, and
- Alt keys, Press F7, then type the letters S,P,A,M followed by the last number
- in the Available Memory display and the third from the last number in
- that display. [in my case, 9202k, it was "2" and "2".] Then release the
- Shift, Ctrl, and Alt keys.
-
- Tiny photo images of the Ami Pro developers appear.
-
-
- --------------------
- Application: Minesweeper game
- --------------------
-
- Source: Jay Rosenbaum (jdr@pub2.bu.edu)
-
- Just start Minesweeper normally. When it has loaded, type
- "xyzzy <ENTER> <SHIFT-ENTER>". The upper left hand pixel on your
- screen will light up whenever your mouse is over a safe square.
-
- --------------------
- Application: Corel Draw! V3.0
- --------------------
-
- Source: jdmathew (faculty@mtu.edu)
-
- Hold down CTRL-SHIFT and select "help" and then "about", while still
- holding down CTRL-SHIFT, double click on the balloon on the left side of the
- help box. The box expands, and the text dissapears, and the balloon moves
- to the bottom of the box. Hold down the right mouse button to light the
- burner on the balloon. If you hold the mouse button down, you'll see the
- balloon move up, pulling a text banner listing authors and beta testers.
-
- [My tests show that the *left* button lights the burner. Also, if you
- release the burner button (whichever one it is) the balloon will slow
- its ascent and begin to sink...just like a real balloon. jcm]
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: OS/2
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Janos Haide (jhaide.novell@sjfsmtp.novell.com),
- also Panagiotis Skagos (skagos@hercules.cs.uregina.ca)
-
- Make the desktop active (i.e., click on the desktop).
-
- Press alt-shift-ctrl-o simultaneously. You get a beach scene with
- a pink flamingo (and other nifty things) plus a list of the program
- authors.
-
- Press any other key returns you to your regularly scheduled Workplace Shell.
-
- A followup posting from Mike Levis (mlevis@ringer.cs.utsa.edu) says:
-
- According to the FAQL, you also need to have the optional bitmaps
- installed as well. I think selecting the optional bitmaps unpacks
- two files called "AAAAA.EXE" and "AAAAA.MET" to the \OS2\BITMAP dir.
-
-
- Source: Cjin Lee (cjin@snake3.cs.wisc.edu, cjin%bc@cs.wisc.edu)
-
- Click on the desktop with right mouse button. Select
- Setting->Lockup. Go to Page 2/3 for Lockup settings. Select (none)
- for the bmp to display for lockup. Now get out of the settings mode
- and try lockup.
-
- When "none" means something......
-
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Macintosh hardware and OS
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Louis Koziarz (lnk10562@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu)
-
- Product: Mac SE
-
- Get into the debugger
- Set PC to 41D789A (i.e., >G 41D89A at the prompt)
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Luke Mewburn (s902113@minyos.xx.rmit.oz.au)
-
- Product: Macintosh II models (exact types uncertain); Mac SE/30 (hardware)
-
- Set the system clock to the American release of the machine [what are
- the valid values? jcm]
- Reboot, holding down command-option-model name characters (e.g., on
- an FX you hold down cmnd-opt-f-x)
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Louis Koziarz (lnk10562@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu)
- (and many, many others)
-
- Product: Mac SE, Mac II ci
-
- On a Macintosh SE, hit the programmer's switch, then type G 41D89A
-
- On a Macintosh IIci, first set the date to 09/20/89, then restart
- the machine and hold down Command+Opt+c+i during the reboot.
-
- And if you're lucky enough to have an original copy of MultiFinder,
- the About box has a simple tremendous list of credits. But all
- is not lost in the newer versions. Leave the `About MultiFinder'
- box open for about an hour. It will turn into the message [rot13]
-
- V jnag zl, V jnag zl, V jnag zl ybbx naq srry.
-
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Arthur Evans (ae@sei.cmu.edu)
-
- Product: System 7
-
- Under System 7 with the Finder running, select "About Finder" on the
- Apple menu with the OPTION key to see a list of all developers. Be
- patient, it takes a while. Using OPTION-COMMAND does that and also
- turns the cursor into a smiley.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: WORD 4 for the Mac
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Louis Koziarz (lnk10562@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu)
-
- Call up the "About Word..." dialog box
- Press and hold the command key
- Click on the flying W logo
-
- --------------------------------------------------
- Product: Commodore PET
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Jan Schiefer (jan@nasobem.stgt.sub.org)
-
- On the Commodore PET 2001, a "POKE 6502,n" where 0 <= n <= 255 resulted in
- the machine printing the string MICROSOFT! on the screen n times.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------
- Product: Commodore 128
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Norman St. John Polevaulter (MBS110@psuvm.psu.edu)
-
- And of course, going WAY back, there is the credits and anti-war message
- you could coax out of a Commodore 128 by typing:
-
- SYS 32800,123,45,6
-
- in BASIC.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Commodore Business Machines 1581 Disk Drive
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Eric Pass (epass@nyx.cs.du.edu)
-
- error = $ff3f
- org $3000
- lda #$79
- jmp error
-
- which gives you an author's credit. Substitute #$7a for #$79 to get a
- dedication to one of the authors' wives.
-
- The two messages are listed in the 1581 dos reference
- guide as:
-
- $79: Software by David Siracusa. Hardware by Greg Berlin
- $7a: Dedicated to my wife Lisa
-
- Here is a BASIC program written by Russell Prater to illustrate the
- messages.
-
- 10 open15,9,15:n$="m-w":m$=n$
- 20 fori=1to8:reada:n$=n$+chr$(a):next
- 30 fori=1to8:reada:m$=m$+chr$(a):next
- 40 print#15,n$:print#15,"m-e"chr$(0)chr$(3)
- 50 fori=0to1:get#15,a$:i=st:printa$;:next
- 60 print#15,m$:print#15,"m-e"chr$(0)chr$(3)
- 70 fori=0to1:get#15,a$:i=st:printa$;:next
- 80 data 0,3,5,169,121,76,63,255
- 90 data 0,3,5,169,122,76,63,255
-
- Information derived from messages on the C_B_M Echo
- by Russell Prater and David Schmoll
-
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Amiga hardware and software
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Raymond Chen (raymond@math.berkeley.edu)
-
- On the Amiga (NB), perss and hold the following keys:
- LeftShift, LeftAlt, RightShift, RightAlt
- Now press one of the 10 function keys. (Keep those four keys down!)
- Each function key produces a different message.
-
- To get the rude message, insert a disk into the internal drive.
- (Still holding down all those keys?) Now eject it.
-
- The rude message has been deleted from newer versions of KickStart.
- Get 1.2/33.166 or earlier.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Joe Smith (jms@tardis.Tymnet.COM)
-
- With an Amiga running AmigaDOS-1.2, hold down the left-shift + left-alt +
- right-shift + right-alt and then press and release F1, then F2, etc.
- This will display in the title bar the nicknames of the designers.
- Here's a description from 2 years ago:
-
- :Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga
- :Subject: Re: silly messages
- :Message-ID: <5153@cs.Buffalo.EDU>
- :Date: 10 Apr 89 18:07:32 GMT
- :
- :In article <1720@wpi.wpi.edu> pawn@wpi.wpi.edu (Kevin Goroway) writes:
- :>Were those silly little messages in workbench taken out in v1.3 OS?
- :>The ones I am refering to can be seen when one hits LS-LA-RS-RA-Fx
- :>while looking at the wkbnch screen...
- :>
- :>just wondering...
- :
- :Coincidentally, I forgot to metion in my last posting on this subject that
- :it is not just on the workbench screen -- workbench must be loaded, i.e.,
- :somewhere the line loadwb had to have been executed before any of this
- :happens. Sadly, the messages are not still there, or if they are, they are
- :brought up in some other way in V1.3.
- :
- :I retraced my steps so to speak, and have come up with the last 2 messages
- :mentioned in that last post. Both shifts, both Alt's, F10, pop out df0:
- :disk for one message. Then, WHILE STILL HOLDING ALL OF THAT (important!!),
- :position the pointer in the screen drag bar (at the top), hold down the
- :left mouse button (or simulate it by also catching the left A key next
- :to left Alt) and reinsert the disk.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Chris'n'Vickie of Chicago (katefans@chinet.chi.il.us)
-
- Version 1.0 of the Amiga OS Workbench had credits for the hardware
- and software team hidden tucked into some unused bytes. They were accessed
- by holding down 6 keys and pressing a 7th. By holding down the same six
- keys _and_ ejecting the internal floppy disk you could get:
-
- "We built the Amiga..."
-
- and when you pushed the floppy back in:
-
- "...and Commodore f**ked it up!"
-
- [Following a query from Ye Editor of this FAQ list, the posting continues:]
-
- Well, it's been a long time since I did this and I probably have it
- wrong, and I no longer have a copy of that version, etc., etc.
-
- But...I think that one held down both shift keys, both alt keys and
- both "Amiga" keys, and pressed the function keys in order, to get the
- ten credits. The delete key was held down and the disk was ejected to
- get the first part of the last message, and pushed back in to get the
- second part.
-
- This is fairly well known in the Amiga community, and the fun stopped
- when the biggest Amiga magazine published this little gem. Unfortunetly
- I had to get rid of all my old copies of "Amiga World" so I cannot check.
-
- P.S. Yes, I typed this on an old Amiga 1000, but don't worry; I'm not
- dangerous.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Peter da Silva (peter@taronga.com)
-
- katefans@chinet.chi.il.us (Chris'n'Vickie of Chicago) writes:
- > Version 1.0 of the Amiga OS Workbench had credits for the hardware
- ^^^--- 1.2
- > and software team hidden tucked into some unused bytes.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Raymond Chen (raymond@math.berkeley.edu)
- (Forwarding from phil@adam.adelaide.edu.au (Phil Kernick) )
-
- You have to be running KickStart 1.2 (33.166 I think, I can't remember if
- they were all there in the 33.180 release).
-
- Now, press the following all at the same time,
-
- Left-Shift Left-Alt Right-Alt Right-Shift
-
- and then press one of the 10 functions keys (while still holding down
- the above four) and you get one of 10 different messages in the menu
- bar.
-
- Now for the fun bit.
-
- Do the above, and then while holding down all 5 keys, insert a disk in the
- internal drive, and you get *another* message, and for the classic conclusion
- after all this (still holding down all 5 keys?) eject the disk, and the
- message:
-
- We made Amiga, they fucked it up
-
- appears in the menu bar.
-
-
- Now another Amiga hidden message (also in KS1.2).
-
- Go into preferences, on the first screen, there are pictures of two mice,
- one to set the double-click speed and one to set the mouse speed. Click
- on each of the buttons on the mice 5 time in the following order.
-
- 1234 1234 1234 1234 1234
-
- /------\ /------\
- | 1 2 | | 3 4 |
- | | | |
- | | | |
- +------+ +------+
-
- Now select printer setup, scroll all the way up the list of possible
- printers, and then all the way down.
-
- Then the title bar of the preferences window changes to something like
- (it been a *long* time since I tried this):
-
- Congratulations =RJ=
-
- Appearantly just as the guys finished the preferences tool, RJ Michel, one
- of the Amiga designers became a father (everybody say aaahh!).
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Jim Shaffer (jms@vanth.UUCP)
-
- Dale Luck, formerly of the Amiga development team, tells a story about
- hacking the system software when the custom chips were still on
- breadboards. To prevent blowing out the hardware, he put an anti-static
- mat on the floor and convinced everyone to go barefoot.
-
- They would also dance during late-night compiler runs to prevent falling
- asleep. One of the hidden messages in version 1.2 credits "Moral Support:
- Joe Pillow and the Dancing Fools."
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Jim Shaffer (jms@vanth.UUCP)
-
- Incidentally, I just re-checked my version of KickStart 1.2. The "We made
- the Amiga, they..." sequence is replaced by "The Amiga - Born a Champion,
- Still a Champion." I couldn't find anything at all in KickStart 1.3.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Peter da Silva (peter@taronga.com)
-
- katefans@chinet.chi.il.us (Chris'n'Vickie of Chicago) writes:
- > But...I think that one held down both shift keys, both alt keys and
- > both "Amiga" keys, and pressed the function keys in order, to get the
- > ten credits. The delete key was held down and the disk was ejected to
- ^^^^^^^^^^--- mouse button.
- > get the first part of the last message, and pushed back in to get the
- > second part.
-
- It also only works with rev 1.2 of the OS. There was also another egg
- hidden in the printer preferences. It was a lot less obvious. :->
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: rivero@vxd.mdcbbs.com
-
- In article <1992Jan2.122451.18215@news.stolaf.edu>, seebs@asgaard.acc
- .stolaf.edu (The Laughing Prophet) writes:
- > A quick search through KS2.04 reveals only two things that I noticed:
- >
- > 1] something like "what secret message?". (don't remember - I checked this
- > a few months back.)
- > 2] in hex, FE ED C0 ED BA BE. :)
- >
-
- The hidden Amiga messages were on the Amiga 1000, and then only on earlier
- units. One of the messages, accessed by holding down both "Amiga" keys and
- two other keys WHILE inserting a disk into the floppy drive, was rather
- explicit in its opinion of Commodore after they acquired the Amiga company.
- Once word of that message got out, a purge was ordered of all hidden messages.
-
- BTW, the inside top cover of the Amiga is autographed by the machine
- developers (and somebody's dog).
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Peter da Silva (peter@taronga.com)
-
- An undocumented feature of the Amiga 1.2 O/S. If you brought up the mouse
- preferences and clicked all four mouse buttons in the picture, then clicked
- an invisible gadget next to the date, the window title changed to a cute
- message about the programmer's SO.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Norman St. John Polevaulter (MBS110@psuvm.psu.edu)
-
- While we're at it, the new OS2.04 has its own set of secret messages.
- When workbench is running, hold down control, alt, and shift, and start
- selecting items from the leftmost Workbench menu. It may take a few
- tries to get them, but they're in there.
-
- --------------------------------------------------
- Product: Tandy ColorComputer III
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Jyri J. Virkki (j_virkki@upr2.clu.net)
-
- 1) If you hold down <Alt>+<Control> and press the Reset button, you get
- a digitized image of the three guys who wrote the echancements to the ROM's.
- As an additional bonus, this trick served the purpose of performing a
- cold-boot of the computer, allowing you to break out of those annoying
- programs (mostly games) that required you to turn the machine off to
- get out of them.
-
- 2) In the built-in BASIC, you could specify CLS n (0<=n<=8) to clear the
- screen with various colors. If you specified numbers out of range, but
- <100, you would get an error message as expected, but the first time
- you did CLS n with n>=100, you would get a short message, again with
- the names of these individuals. Subsequent attempts would just give
- you the standard error message.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: OS9 level I for the Tandy ColorComputer I, II, and III
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Richard Hempsey (rich%knoware@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca)
-
- Hitting CTRL-A, the "repeat previous command line" key at the
- command line _immediately_ after boot displays
-
- by K.Kaplan, L.Crane, R.Doggett
-
- This also works for OS9 Level II for the Color Computer 3, at boot or
- after the creation of any new immortal shell.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Acorn Archimedes
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- From: Andrew Brooks (arb@computing.lancaster.ac.uk), who credits
- them to Julian Wright, wright_j@kosmos.wcc.govt.nz)
-
- On RISC-OS 2.00: SYS 68,59243844
- On RISC-OS 3.00: SYS 68,60816742
-
- Additional info from Andrew Brooks <arb@computing.lancaster.ac.uk>
-
- The above two SYS calls print a list of the names of the developers.
-
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Simon Burrows (smb@cs.nott.ac.uk),
- forwarded by Andrew Brooks (arb@computing.lancaster.ac.edu)
-
- Following much investigation, disassembly etc, here is a summary of the
- RISC OS 3 Credits which work on my machines:
-
- RISC OS 3.00
- ============
-
- When the RISC OS 3.00 title screen is displayed, quickly type the letters
- 'r-m-t-m-d', and if you get the timing right, photographs of the RISC OS 3
- Development team will be displayed on screen.
-
- Go to the RISC OS 3.00 Info Window (from the switcher icon). Click on the
- letters 'r-m-t-m-d' from the words 'Acorn Computers Ltd' using the MENU
- button, and a long list of credits will be flashed up.
-
-
- RISC OS 3.10
- ============
-
- The photograph facility appears to have been removed.
-
- To access the info window credits, click on the letters 't-e-a-m' from
- 'Acorn Computers Ltd' using the MENU button, and a (different) long list
- of credits will be displayed. (If you click in the wrong places, the
- machine *may* crash).
-
-
- Source: Nicko van Someren (nbvs@cl.cam.ac.uk)
- (also forwarded by Andrew Brooks)
-
- Subject: RISC OS 3.10 Secret message
-
- The other day I was looking through the template files stored in ResourceFS
- in the RISC OS 3.10 ROM. In the template file for the switcher there is
- a dialogue box called power. It appears to contain a secret message left
- by the RISC OS team. Take a look :-)
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: NeXT systems and software
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: schuetz@ectds.com, also Timothy Buck (timbuck@borg.lib.vt.edu)
-
- In Improv (version 1.0) for NeXTstep from Lotus, go to the Info Panel,
- and in the space to the left of the Improv title, hold down shift,
- alternate, and command, and click the mouse. A "little man" with big
- bug-eyes shows up....
-
- To clear it, you quit Improv.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: None Of The Above (TM)
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: "Peter the Bugman" (maxis@aol.com)
-
- Various Maxis simulation games:
-
- For SimCity: On any platform, hold down the shift key and type in "fund".
- This gives you an instant 10,000$, but if you do it too often, you will get
- earthquakes, regardless of how the disaster settings are set.
-
- =-=-=-=
-
- For SimEarth: On any platfiorm, hold down the shift key and type in joke,
- then open the Gaia window.
-
- =-=-=-=
-
- For SimAnt: type in any of the following:
- oops
- rand
- erad
- FUND
- joke
- HOLE
- hole
- jeff
- will
- These all do various things that are easily recognizable.
-
- =-=-=-=
-
- For A-Train: hold down the control and alt keys, then type in "bellybutton".
-
- Once the game is ended, watch very carefully. The ending screen shot is
- not the same. (Our programmers have a bizzarre sense of humour.)
- That is a picture of their, well, er ...uh.... bellybuttons.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Source: Steven R. Staton (sstaton@micrografx.com)
-
- MVP rasterizer cards from Matrix Instruments/AFGA/Miles:
-
- On the {Matrix Instruments|AGFA Matrix|Miles Division Matrix} MVP and
- MVP*Star rasterizer boards for the IBM-pc (used to drive the QCR, PCR,
- Forte, and other film recorders) there is a cookie in the foreground mode
- of the MVP software. Enter foreground mode and press ALT-<2><5><5> (send
- the ASCII character 255 via the keypad). The cookie (which is different
- in MVP 3.5, 4.0, 4.1[grrr...] and 4.2) appears in the STATUS box where
- normally there is hexadecimal numbers.
-
- I don't remember the exact wording, but under MVP 3.5 it says
- something like "despite rancid source code, inept management, and
- poor tools, we proudly present MVP 3.5 with EGA and 24-bit overlays--
- D Miller S Staton."
-
- [The text is different in later releases of the program.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Source: Dean Inada (dmi@peregrine.com)
-
- Mattel Intellevision games:
-
- Transcribed verbatim off an old photocopy,
- we called them "Copyright Kludges" back then.
- The date style marks this compilation as the work of
- Chris Hawley
- [Notation: hold down indicated keys during powerup.]
-
- Kluge file for Games- Updated 8107.13
-
- ROULETTE: left = 13 right = 123
- SKIING: left = 57 right = 57
- WORD FUN: press 43210 during word rockets mode
- ARMOR BATTLE: left = 3 right = 9
- HORSE RACING: left = 69 right = 69
- BOXING: left = lower two action keys and wheel direction 7
- SPACE ARMADA: left = 46 OR clear-enter
- right = lower two action keys
- AUTO RACE: pres 169 on any keypad to get real steering
- STAR STRIKE: left = 19 OR 37
- FRENCH CASSETTE: left = 19 right = 80
- during introduction (menu #0); then exit to
- monitor (menu #6)
- DEMO CASSETTE: type "dei" (lower case) during space battle
-
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: John Hawkinson (jhawk@panix.com)
-
- On a RSTS/E system, type:
-
- $ HELP SPIKE
- $ HELP ADVANCED SPIKE
-
- Of course, these don't show up in the HELP topics listing...
-
- They give info on Spike, the RSTS/E mascot (a bulldog, if
- I'm not mistaken).
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: Zebee Johnstone (zebee@ucs.adelaide.edu.au)
-
- The Data General AOS/VS 16 bit OS responds to XYZZY with "nothing happens".
-
- The new 32 bit AOS/VS II responds with "twice as much happens"
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: Tim Shoppa (shoppa@erin.caltech.edu)
-
- Typing "SHOW USERS" at the RT11 prompt (a single-user system) gives
- a response of "NOBODY BUT YOU!".
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: Denis Fortin (fortin@zap.uucp)
-
- Also in RT-11:
- Typing HELP FOO
- produced NO HELP IS AVAILABLE FOR FOO
-
- But typing HELP ME
- produced NO HELP IS AVAILABLE FOR YOU
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: Joe Newcomer and many others:
-
- under TECO, originally under TOPS-10 and subsequently ported to other
- platforms (including this Easter egg):
-
- Type the command:
-
- MAKE LOVE
-
- which is supposed to create a new file named LOVE using TECO. The
- command executes as intended, but only after responding with a message:
-
- Not war?
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: Barry Ferris (ferris@netcom.COM)
-
- of course, this wasn't the only TECO egg...type in:
-
- $ make war
- to get
- not love?
-
- -------------------------------
-
- Source: Earle Ake (ake@dayton.saic.com)
-
- VMS Easter Eggs:
-
- $ anal/system
-
- VAX/VMS System analyzer
-
- SDA> show cluster/scs
-
- VAXcluster data structures
- --------------------------
-
- --- SCS Listening Process Directory ---
-
- Entry Address Connection ID Process Name Information
- ------------- ------------- ------------ -----------
-
- 80308800 071D0000 SCS$DIRECTORY What city, plez?
- 803087A0 071D0001 MSCP$TAPE NOT PRESENT HERE
- 80308740 071D0002 MSCP$DISK NOT PRESENT HERE
-
- ----------------------------
-
- Source: cac%sierra.com@mwunix.mitre.org
-
- The following exists on every VMS I have ever seen:
-
- % mcr sysgen
- SYSGEN> SHOW TIMEPROMPTWAIT
- Parameter Name Current Default Min. Max. Unit Dyna
- -------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ---- ----
- TIMEPROMPTWAIT 65535 -1 0 -1 uFortnight
-
-
- Also, I no longer have access to a VMS DBMS, but I recall that typing
- HELP WOMBAT inside the DBMS would give about three pages of interesting
- facts about Wombats, and that PLOT WOMBAT would draw a wombat on your
- terminal.
-
- -------------------------------
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
- Product: Hewlett-Packard products
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Chris'n'Vickie of Chicago (katefans@chinet.chi.il.us)
-
- In a prior article Norman Soley writes:
-
- >In a prior article Steve VanDevender writes...
-
- >>The weirdest thing I found in my HP 150 is that the phrase "My
- >>mind is going..." is burned in one of the ROMs. I have no idea
- >>why it's there or if it would ever appear on the screen. My pet
- >>theory is that it's a diagnostic that appears if some of the ROMs
- >>are missing (a la the HAL dismantling scene in 2001).
-
- >More likely someone noticed there were a few unused bytes at the end of the
- >ROM and slid that in as a joke. There is the well know story of the "resist
- >the draft" message that's stored in some user inaccesable (usually) part of
- >someone's LOGO and one or more of the VAX chips has "VAX, for those who care
- >enough to steal the best" in Russian on an unused part of the mask....
-
- >In all cases the companies involved claimed no knowledge of these when
- >discovered.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Mik Butler (mik@hpopd.pwd.hp.com)
-
- >If I remember correctly there was an easter egg in the 150 that would
- >cause it to respond to XYZZY in the right circumstances.
- >The 'My mind is going' may well have been the response.
- >
- >Rodney Brown, Co-Cam Computer Group, ACSNet: rdb@mel.cocam.oz.au
-
- To get an HP150 (or HP2625/HP2628 terminal) to produce the "my mind
- is going..." message, send or type the sequence <esc>&a?
-
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Source: Steve VanDevender (stevev@grayback.uoregon.edu)
-
- In article <44880008@hpopd.pwd.hp.com> mik@hpopd.pwd.hp.com (Mik
- Butler) writes:
- >
- > To get an HP150 (or HP2625/HP2628 terminal) to produce the "my mind
- > is going..." message, send or type the sequence <esc>&a?
-
- Thank you thank you thank you. I discovered the "My mind is
- going..." message when I was in larval stage not long after I got
- my 150 and wrote a memory scanner. Only now, almost eight years
- later, do I know how to get the message. It indeed works on my
- HP 150 with Rev B roms.
-
- ============================================================
-
-
- The following is a massive summary of Macintosh Easter Eggs compiled
- by Bryan Kendig of Princeton, and forwarded to me by Kees Huyser.
- Please send any comments or updates to this FAQ list directly to
- Bryan at bskendig@phpenix.Princeton.edu.
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- The Macintosh Secret Trick List
- compiled by Brian Kendig (bskendig@phoenix.Princeton.EDU)
- Fifth revision.
-
- Please report corrections to me, no matter how insignificant!
- You may (of course!) distribute information about these tricks freely,
- but please keep my name on this list if you pass it around whole.
- New info about tricks will be attributed and very much appreciated.
-
- The information below includes what to do to make a trick happen, then
- what the trick really is. If you don't want the trick spoiled (you
- don't want to know what it does until you try it yourself), you can
- display only the instructions for making it happen (the lines that
- begin with an equals-sign) with the Unix command
-
- grep '^=' tricks
-
- where "tricks" is the name of this file.
-
- Here's a not-a-trick that every Tom, Dick, and Harriet out there has
- been reporting to me: Press Command-Option-Escape to kill the process
- currently in the foreground. This is useful if your machine is taking
- way too long to finish something and is ignoring you, or if your
- machine has crashed -- sometimes you can use this trick to regain
- control of your machine long enough to save your work and restart your
- Mac. (After you use this trick, you should generally restart as soon
- as possible.)
-
- A lot of people have been telling me about this, but it's not a trick!
- It's a documented feature of System 7. However, since lots of people
- never saw it in the manuals, I might as well have it here too.
-
-
- = -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- =
- = Hardware
- =
- = Macintosh Plus
- = From the debugger, enter "G 40E118".
- =
- This gives you a "Stolen from Apple Computer" message.
-
-
- = Macintosh SE
- = Hit the interrupt switch (the button with the broken circle on it, on
- = the left side of your machine closer to the back) to go into the
- = built-in debugger, and enter "G 41D89A".
- =
- Four bitmap pictures of the Macintosh development team appear as a
- slideshow. Reboot (hit the button closer to the front, with the
- triangle on it) to get out of the endless cycle.
-
-
- = Macintosh Classic
- = Hold down Command-Option-x-o right after you turn on or reboot the
- = machine.
- =
- The Classic starts up from a minimal ROM-disk which contains
- System 6.0.3, Finder 6.1x, and AppleShare. (This version of the
- System is not recommended to run the Classic under.) If you look at
- the ROM-disk with a program able to see invisible files (like ResEdit
- or MacTools), you'll find folders hidden there bearing the names of
- the Classic designers.
-
-
- = 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.
-
-
- = 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.
-
-
- = -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- =
- = System
- = ("7.0" means "7.0.0" or "7.0.1".)
- =
- = 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
- = Search the STR# resources with ResEdit.
- =
- One STR# resource contains three strings:
- "I want my"
- "I want my"
- "I want my l--k and f--l"
- (Anybody know how to get this message to come up without having to
- snoop around in ResEdit?)
- (Contributed by Tony Cooper)
-
-
- = System 6.0.7 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 at the end of the data fork.
- (Contributed by Kevin Bolduan)
-
-
- = System 6.0.7J (Kanjitalk)
- = Set the clock to January 1, 1992, and restart.
- =
- The startup screen says "Happy new year" in Japanese.
- (Contributed by Junio Hamano)
-
-
- = Finder 7.0
- = Hold down Option while choosing "About This Macintosh".
- =
- (The menu option changes to "About the Finder".) The original picture
- of the mountains from System 1.0 appears. If the creation date of the
- invisible "Desktop Folder" is May 13, 1991, 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.
-
-
- = Caches 7.0.1
- = Option-click on the version number in the upper right-hand corner.
- =
- The "040" icon will whoosh over, revealing the name of the programmer.
-
-
- = Caps Lock 7.0.1 (on a PowerBook)
- = Turn on balloon help, press Caps Lock, and point to the up-arrow icon
- = in the menu bar.
- =
- The balloon help reads: "This file allows your Macintosh TIM or
- Derringer to display an icon..." (These were the working names of the
- PowerBooks; Apple forgot to change the extension before System 7.0.1
- was released!)
-
-
- = Color Control Panel 7.0
- = Option-click on the Sample Text a few times.
- =
- The strings "by Dean Yu" "& Vincent Lo" alternate.
-
-
- = 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".
-
-
- = Map Control Panel 1.x (released with System 6) and 7.0
- = Type MID as the city name, and click Find. Also try: clicking on the
- = version number, option-clicking on Find, opening the control panel
- = while you hold down shift and/or option, clicking somewhere in the Map
- = and dragging off the edge of it, or copying the map from the Scrapbook
- = and pasting it while the Map control panel is open.
- =
- 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.
- Dragging off the edge of the map 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
- programmers; each name points to a submenu with a few comments.
- (Contributed by Povl Hessellund Pedersen)
-
-
- = Monitors Control Panel 7.0
- = Click the version number (7.0) in the control panel window. While you
- = hold down the mouse button, tap Option several times.
- =
- When you click, a box pops up with the names of the people who wrote
- Monitors. Pressing Option 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".
-
-
- = Puzzle Desk Accessory 7.0
- = 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)
-
-
- = 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..."
-
- = -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- =
- = Other Software
- =
- = Adobe Photoshop
- = Hold down the Option key and select "About Photoshop".
- =
- A dialog crediting "Knoll Software" as the original designers appears.
- (Contributed by Karl-Koenig Koenigsson)
-
-
- = Claris CAD
- = Hold down the Option key and select "About Claris CAD".
- =
- A system configuration summary appears.
- (Contributed by Karl-Koenig Koenigsson)
-
-
- = Disinfectant
- = Select "About Disinfectant."
- =
- A bitmap photo of John Norstad appears in one half of the dialog,
- while in the other half an animated sequence of virus names march out
- while the Monty Python theme song plays, until they get stomped by
- a huge foot.
- (Contributed by Dave Claytor)
-
-
- = FlashWrite II
- = Hold down Option as you select "About FlashWrite II" under the "star" logo.
- =
- A Mr. Mojo Risin' quotation appears.
- (Contributed by Dave Claytor)
-
-
- = HyperCard 2.x
- = Hold down Option as you select "About Hypercard...".
- =
- You get (in 2.1 only) a dialog describing your system setup, and (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".
- Also, on a Quadra, you will be told your system is a "Macintosh Macintosh".
- (Thanks to Seth Theriault for more info.)
-
-
- = Installer 3.x (this only seems to work under System 6, or am I wrong?)
- = 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)
-
-
- = 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)
-
-
- = KiwiEnvelopes! 3.1
- = Choose "About KiwiEnvelopes!".
- =
- A letter is deposited into a mail truck which then rolls off the screen.
- After it leaves, a marquee shows the names of the development team.
- (Contributed by Dave Claytor)
-
-
- = MacDraw Pro
- = Hold down Option while selecting "About MacDraw Pro".
- =
- The dialog shows your system setup.
- (Contributed by Dave Claytor)
-
-
- = MacPaint 2.0 (only the first few copies, before Claris caught it)
- = Hold down Tab and Space while choosing "About MacPaint".
- =
- A bitmap of a well-known painting of a nude zebra-striped woman atop a
- white zebra appears.
-
-
- = Microsoft Excel 3.0
- = Open a new spreadsheet, then go to 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)
-
- = Here's another: 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.") alternates with the names of
- the developers ("Recalc or Die!").
- (Contributed by Rob Griffiths)
-
-
- = Microsoft Word 3.01 and 4.x
- = Spellcheck the word "childcare".
- =
- The spell-checker will suggest one word: "kidnaper" (sic).
- (Contributed by Adam Shostack)
-
-
- = Microsoft Word 4.0
- = Select "About Microsoft Word" and command-click on the Word icon.
- =
- The resulting dialog gives the names of beta-testers.
-
-
- = Norton Utilities 1.1
- = Command-click the little rhomboid just in front of the string
- = "Version 1.1" in the About box.
- =
- A list of the developers appears.
- (Contributed by Karl-Koenig Koenigsson)
-
-
- = QuicKeys 2
- = Open the macro definition window, and click on the logo to bring
- = up a credits window. Wait for about half a minute.
- =
- A bunny walks across the window beating a drum. After it crosses,
- the message "QuicKeys keeps on going!" is displayed.
- (Contributed by Kenny Wong)
-
-
- = ResEdit 2.1
- = Turn on Balloon Help and point to the ResEdit file.
- =
- The balloon reads: "... Apple recommends that you use ResEdit only
- on expendable copies of your files."
- (Contributed by Takeshi Miyazaki.)
-
-
- = 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.)
-
- Mr. Street adds that if you turn on pig mode while running ResEdit
- from a floppy disk the disk will "oink" a few times each second (most
- easily heard on an old Plus in a quiet room), but when I tried this
- my machine crashed. ;)
-
-
- = 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.
-
-
- = Speed Disk (from Norton Utilities 1.1)
- = Command-click the little rhomboid just in front of the string
- = "Version 1.1".
- =
- 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)
-
-
- = WriteNow 2.2
- = Select "About WriteNow", then option-click on the About dialog.
- =
- Little men run out and change all the letters one-by-one.
-
-
- = -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- =
- = And now, for something completely different!
- = Masatsugu Nagata has reported a really nifty trick to me that I
- = don't have the resources to confirm, but I'd be muchly appreciative
- = of any hacker with time on his hands who'd like to pin this one down.
- =
- = The ingredients:
- = One Macintosh SE/30
- = System 7.0 or 7.0.1
- = Kerry Clendinning's "Easy Keys 1.5" Control Panel
- = QUED/M 2.09 (The text editor from Paragon; little brother of NISUS)
- =
- = Assign some key combinations in Easy Keys Control Panel.
- = Launch QUED/M, and press the key combination.
- = Then, an "address error" bomb alert comes up, but you can click on
- = "Continue" to keep going -- go ahead and click "Continue".
- =
- = Everything is normal again until you quit QUED/M, at which time
- = the screen blanks to all white except for the figure of a Mac and
- = a "Mac SE/30 Engineering Hall of Fame" list.
- = The only way out is to press the reset button.
- =
- = Perhaps the address error hit the address for the "Hall of Fame"
- = accidentally. Hence my request: can anyone pinpoint what this
- = address is to run the credits?
- =
- --
-
-
- * * * End of File * * *
-
-