Easter Eggs Microsoft Office 2010
Installer Une Suspension Dcl more. Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Early easter eggs [ ] In Microsoft, there is an easter egg where the developers' names can be seen at start up, printed in colorful text, flying in one letter at a time from every corner. This only works in QBasic, not the older, and is best seen on an older, slower machine. Windows [ ] Windows 3.0 has a developer credits page which may be accessed by setting the focus to the desktop (by minimizing all windows and clicking on an open area of the desktop) then typing win30 followed by, in quick succession, F3 and the Backspace key. This causes the developer credits to appear on the desktop in the form of the email names of the crew.
Microsoft Bear appearance in an easter egg Windows 3.1 has two visible easter eggs, both of which reference the Microsoft Bear, which was the of the development team. One was the developer credits, where the Bear, along with, and, present the email aliases of the Windows 3.1 developers. Bradsi, being in charge of Windows production, is listed first ( see picture); the three other presenters, billg, steveb, and t-bear, appear together in ' Special Thanks', the last section of the list. The other one was a reference to a fictitious file named BEAR.EXE in the properties window for the MS-DOS Prompt.
Aug 28, 2010 Microsoft’s developers hid multiple Easter Eggs in Word.
Internally, there was another egg, where several internal system (although having meaningful internal names) were exported from user.exe as BEAR NNN (where NNN is the ordinal number of the function) in his honor and to by incautious third party software developers. Windows 95 has an animated presentation of the Win95 developers, complete with music. During the development of Microsoft Windows 95, the shell developers had several stuffed animals as mascots. In addition to the Microsoft Bear, there were two bunnies as well, the smaller 16-bit Bunny and the larger 32-bit Bunny. The bunnies' names referred to the fact that Windows 95 was the transitional OS. The Microsoft Bunny has an exported function named after him, BUNNY_351 in krnl386.exe. Also, the Bunny is the icon for the Microsoft Party Line (rumor.exe) in some pre-release versions of Windows 95.
Windows 98 credits easter egg Windows 98 has a credits screen easter egg. A drawing of the Microsoft Bear was used as the for the SETDEBUG.EXE and JDBGMGR.EXE system files.
The odd icon gave credibility to the, which claimed that the files were part of a. See for a similar hoax. The pipe screensaver in Windows 95 through to ME inclusive very occasionally has the appear instead of a standard joint. It only appears if the pipes are 'multiple', pipe-style 'standard', joint-type 'multiple' and texture 'solid' under the screensaver's settings. An Easter egg that displays the names of all the volcanoes in the United States is found in the '3Dtext' screensaver on all versions of Microsoft Windows including it prior to Windows XP. Candy Cane texture Windows 2000 and XP have an undocumented texture in the pipes (sspipes. Serial Number Syswin 3.4. scr) screensaver that makes the pipes red and white similar to candy canes.
Three images are embedded in the surface of Windows Vista's installation DVD. On one of the images you can see the faces of the members of Microsoft's antipiracy team who worked on the hologram. Run Custom Action During Uninstall Yahoo. Microsoft Office [ ] Word for Windows 2 [ ] In Word for Windows 2, there is a simple animation involving a WordPerfect 'Monster', a fireworks display and credits roll in the About box. The user's name (entered in Tools Options) was appended to the end of the 'Thanks' section of the credits. Office 4.3 [ ] The tip of the day would sometimes display the following fun and inspirational tips.
They could also be viewed in the help file. This first appeared in Office 4.3, and also appeared in Office 95, and 97. • If you do your best, whatever happens will be for the best.