Easter egg (media): Difference between revisions
Tooltip for the hedgehog seems to have an unencyclopedic tone to it. |
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{{Short description|Message, image or feature hidden within a work}} |
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<!--Please do not add your own easter eggs to this article. Humor is not needed here.--> |
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<!--Image map editor - Copyright (c) 2007 on Instagram @luddevi (Dapete): http://toolserver.org/~dapete/ImageMapEdit/ImageMapEdit.html--> |
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:''For the decorated eggs given out to celebrate the Easter holiday, see [[Easter egg]].'' |
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<div class="selfreference noprint"><imagemap> |
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File:Carl Oswald Rostosky - Zwei Kaninchen und ein Igel 1861.jpg|250px|thumb|right|An image that reveals an Easter egg when the hedgehog is clicked or tapped. Another Easter egg can be found in a [[tooltip]] when a [[mouse pointer]] is hovered over the hedgehog.<ref>"Zwei Kaninchen und ein Igel" ("[[commons:File:Carl Oswald Rostosky - Zwei Kaninchen und ein Igel 1861.jpg|Two rabbits and a hedgehog]]") by [[commons:Category:Carl Oswald Rostosky|Carl Oswald Rostosky]].</ref> |
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rect 455 383 550 434 [[commons:File:Bg-easter-eggs.jpg|This is an Easter egg.]] |
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<!-- [[Image:Adventure_Easteregg.PNG|thumb|right|The first easter egg.]] --> |
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desc none |
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A virtual '''Easter egg''' is a hidden message or feature in an object such as a [[film|movie]], [[book]], [[Compact disc|CD]], [[DVD]], [[computer program]], or [[video game]]. The term draws a parallel with the custom of the [[Easter eggs (decorative)|Easter egg hunt]] observed in many western nations. |
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</imagemap></div> |
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{{use dmy dates|date=May 2022}} |
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An '''Easter egg''' is a message, image, or feature hidden in software, a video game, a film, or another—usually electronic—medium. The term used in this manner was coined around 1979 by Steve Wright, the then-Director of Software Development in the Atari Consumer Division, to describe a hidden message in the [[Atari]] video game ''[[Adventure (Atari 2600)|Adventure]]'', in reference to an [[egg hunt|Easter egg hunt]]. |
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The earliest known video game Easter egg is in the 1973 video game ''[[Lunar Lander (video game genre)#Graphical games|Moonlander]]'', in which the player tries to land a [[Lunar module]] on the Moon; if the player opts to fly the module horizontally through several of the game's screens, they encounter a [[McDonald's]] restaurant, and if they land next to it, the astronaut will visit it instead of standing next to the ship. The earliest known Easter egg in software in general is one placed in the "make" command for [[PDP-6]]/[[PDP-10]] computers sometime in October 1967–October 1968, wherein if the user attempts to create a file named "love" by typing "make love", the program responds "[[Make love, not war|not war?]]" before proceeding.<ref name="Montfort"/><ref name="Willaert"/> |
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<!-- SEE COMMENTS IN NEXT PARAGRAPH The origin of the term is sometimes falsely attributed to the movie ''[[Return of the Living Dead]]'', where a [[military]] officer uses it as a [[code word]] for lost [[U.S.]] [[government]] containers of [[zombie]]s created by a [[toxic waste|chemical spill]], or to ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'', in which actual Easter eggs are visible in certain shots (under Frank N. Furter's throne, for example). ''[[Return of the Living Dead]]'' was not released until 1985, and [[Adventure (Atari 2600)|Atari's ''Adventure,'']] released in 1978, contained what is thought to be the first video game Easter egg (the programmer, [[Warren Robinett]]'s name). --> |
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<!-- but was it called an "easter egg" prior to 1985? I believe the term "easter egg" was used, loosely, for hidden goodies of any sort, well prior to 1978 --> |
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==Origin== |
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In computer programming, the underlying motivation is probably to put an individual, almost artistic touch on an intellectual product which is by its nature standardised and functional. <!-- although Warren Robinett's motivation was more likely to gain recognition, since video game programmers were routinely uncredited then. --> It is analogous to signature motifs such as [[Diego Rivera]] including himself in his murals or [[Alfred Hitchcock]]'s legendary [[Cameo appearance|cameos]]. |
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{{see also|Adventure (1980 video game)#Easter egg}} |
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[[File:Adventure Easteregg.PNG|thumb|right|The secret room in ''[[Adventure (1980 video game)|Adventure]]'' with [[Warren Robinett]]'s credit]] |
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The use of the term "[[Easter egg]]" to describe secret features in video games originates from the 1980 video game ''[[Adventure (1980 video game)|Adventure]]'' for the [[Atari 2600]] game console, programmed by the employee [[Warren Robinett]]. At the time, [[Atari Corporation|Atari]] did not include programmers' names in the game credits, both to prevent competitors from poaching its developers as well as to deny developers a means to bargain with the management of the new owners, [[Warner Communications]].<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Yarwood |author-first=Jack |title=Easter Eggs: The Hidden Secrets of Videogames |url=http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2016/03/easter-eggs-the-hidden-secrets-of-videogames.html |website=[[Paste (magazine)|Paste]] |access-date=3 February 2021 |date=27 March 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author1=Fatsquatch |title=Of Dragons and Easter Eggs: A Chat With Warren Robinett |url=https://tjg.joeysit.com/of-dragons-and-easter-eggs-a-chat-with-warren-robinett/ |website=The Jaded Gamer |access-date=3 February 2021 |date=20 May 2003}}</ref> Robinett, who disagreed with his supervisor over this lack of acknowledgment, secretly programmed the message "Created by Warren Robinett" to appear only if a player moves their [[Avatar (computing)|avatar]] over a specific pixel (dubbed the "Gray Dot") during a certain part of the game and enters a previously "forbidden" part of the map where the message can be found. When Robinett left Atari, he did not inform the company of the acknowledgment that he included in the game. Shortly after his departure, the "Gray Dot" and his message were discovered by a player. Atari's management initially wanted to remove the message and release the game again, until this was deemed too costly. Instead, Steve Wright, the Director of Software Development in the Atari Consumer Division, suggested that they keep the message and, in fact, encourage the inclusion of such messages in future games, describing them as Easter eggs for consumers to find.<ref name="Wolf">{{cite book |author-last=Wolf |author-first=Mark J. P. |title=Encyclopedia of Video Games: The Culture, Technology, and Art of Gaming |date=2012 |publisher=Greenwood |location=Santa Barbara, California, USA |isbn=9780313379369 |page=177}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Play Atari Adventure |url=http://my.ign.com/atari/adventure |website=IGN |access-date=4 November 2017 |archive-date=13 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180413222733/http://my.ign.com/atari/adventure |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Baker">{{cite magazine |author-last=Baker |author-first=Chris |title=How One Man Invented the Console Adventure Game |url=https://www.wired.com/2015/03/warren-robinett-adventure/ |magazine=WIRED |access-date=2 September 2016 |date=13 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author-last1=Salen |author-first1=Katie |author-last2=Zimmerman |author-first2=Eric |title=The Game Design Reader: A Rules of Play Anthology |date=2005 |publisher=[[MIT Press]] |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |isbn=0262195364 |pages=690–713 |oclc=58919795}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Letter to Atari |url=http://www.2600connection.com/eastereggs/adventure_letter.pdf |website=2600 Connections |access-date=2 September 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161013192403/http://www.2600connection.com/eastereggs/adventure_letter.pdf |archive-date=13 October 2016 |url-status=usurped |date=4 August 1980}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/08/technology/easter-eggs-tesla-google.html |title=The Secret History of 'Easter Eggs' |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=8 August 2019 |author-last=Pogue |author-first=David |access-date=8 August 2019}}</ref> |
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==In video games== |
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==Computer-related Easter eggs== |
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While Robinett's message in ''[[Adventure (Atari 2600)|Adventure]]'' led to the first use of the phrase "Easter egg", Easter eggs were included in previous video games. The earliest known video game Easter egg is in ''[[Lunar Lander (video game genre)#Graphical games|Moonlander]]'' (1973), in which the player tries to land a spaceship on the Moon. If the player flies far enough horizontally, they encounter a [[McDonald's]] restaurant, and if they land next to it, an astronaut will visit it instead of standing next to the ship.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Willaert |author-first=Kate |title=Ready Player One Was Wrong: The First Easter Eggs In Video Games |url=https://www.acriticalhit.com/ready-player-one-was-wrong-the-first-easter-eggs-in-video-games/ |website=A Critical Hit! |access-date=5 April 2021 |date=4 April 2021}}</ref> Other early known Easter eggs include one in the first text adventure game, ''[[Colossal Cave Adventure]]'' (1976), from which ''Adventure'' was fashioned, which includes several secret words. One of these is "[[xyzzy (computing)|xyzzy]]", a command which enables the player to move between two points in the game world.<ref>{{cite journal |author-last=Jerz |author-first=Dennis G. |title=Somewhere Nearby is Colossal Cave: Examining Will Crowther's Original "Adventure" in Code and in Kentucky |journal=Digital Humanities Quarterly |date=2007 |volume=1 |issue=2 |url=http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/001/2/000009.html |access-date=4 November 2017 |publisher=The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations}}</ref> According to research by [[Ed Fries]], one of the earliest Easter eggs in a graphical video games could be found in ''[[Starship 1]]'' (1977), programmed by Ron Milner. By triggering the cabinet's controls in the right order, the player can have the message "Hi Ron!" appear on the screen. Fries describes it as "the earliest arcade game yet known that clearly meets the definition of an Easter egg". The existence of this Easter egg was not published until 2017, leading Fries to suggest that, as more than one hundred arcade games predate ''Starship 1'', earlier Easter eggs may still be undiscovered.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Machkovech |author-first=Sam |title=The arcade world's first Easter egg discovered after fraught journey |url=https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2017/03/the-arcade-worlds-first-easter-egg-discovered-after-fraught-journey/ |website=[[Ars Technica]] |access-date=22 March 2017 |date=22 March 2017}}</ref><ref name="Fries">{{cite web |author-last=Fries |author-first=Ed |title=The Hunt For The First Arcade Game Easter Egg |url=http://kotaku.com/the-hunt-for-the-first-arcade-game-easter-egg-1793593889 |website=[[Kotaku]] |access-date=24 March 2017 |date=24 March 2017}}</ref> Fries says that some Atari arcade cabinets were resold under the [[Kee Games]] label and include changes to the hardware that make the game appear different from the Atari version. ''[[Anti-Aircraft (video game)|Anti-Aircraft II]]'' (1975) includes a means to modify the circuit board to make the airplanes in the game appear as alien UFOs. Fries surmises that this feature may have been intended for a Kee Games release. For this reason, and because it requires a hardware modification, Fries questions whether it meets the definition of an Easter egg.<ref name="Fries"/> In 2004, an Easter egg displaying programmer Bradley Reid-Selth's surname was found in ''Video Whizball'' (1978), a game for the [[Fairchild Channel F]] system.<ref name="Wolf"/> |
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===Software based=== |
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'''Easter eggs''' are messages, graphics, sound effects, or an unusual change in program behavior, that mainly occur in a software program in response to some undocumented set of commands, mouse clicks, keystrokes or other stimuli intended as a joke or to display program credits. An early use of the term ''Easter egg'' was to describe a message hidden in the [[object code]] of a program as a joke, intended to be found by persons disassembling or browsing the code. |
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Since ''Adventure'', there has been a long history of video game developers placing Easter eggs in their games.<ref name="Consalvo">{{cite book |author-last=Consalvo |author-first=Mia |title=Cheating: Gaining Advantage in Videogames |date=2007 |publisher=[[MIT Press]] |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |isbn=9780262033657}}</ref>{{rp|19}} Most Easter eggs are intentional—an attempt to communicate with the player or a way of getting even with management for a perceived slight. Easter eggs in video games take a variety of forms, from purely ornamental screens to aesthetic enhancements that change some element of the game during play. The Easter egg included in the original ''[[Age of Empires (video game)|Age of Empires]]'' (1997) is an example of the latter; [[catapult]] projectiles are changed from stones to cows.<ref name="Consalvo"/>{{rp|19}} |
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[[Image:Apt-get-easter-egg.png|right|thumb|195px|The ASCII cow from [[apt-get]].]] |
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Two well-known early Easter eggs found in some [[Unix]] [[operating system]]s caused them to respond to the command "make love" with "not war?" and "why" with "why not" (Berkeley Unix 1977 "The Prisoner" reference). The TOPS-10 operating system (for the DEC PDP-10 computer) had the "make love" hack before 1971; it included a short, thoughtful, pause before the response. This same behavior occurred on the [[RSTS/E]] operating system where the command "make" was used to invoke the [[Text Editor and Corrector|TECO]] editor, and TECO would also provide this response. The largest easter egg is purported to be in the Atari 400/800 version of Pitfall II, which contains an entire game that was more complex and challenging than the original Pitfall II ([[Pitfall]]). Many [[personal computers]] have much more elaborate eggs hidden in [[read-only memory|ROM]], including lists of the developers' names, political exhortations, snatches of music, and (in one case) images of the entire development team. The 1997 version of [[Microsoft Excel]] contained a hidden [[flight simulator]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://eeggs.com/items/718.html|title=Excel 97 Flight to Credits|work=The Easter Egg Archive}} </ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://eeggs.com/items/29841.html|title=Excel 97 Flight Simulator - For later versions of Microsoft Excel|work=The Easter Egg Archive}} </ref>; the 1997 version of [[Microsoft Word|Word]], a [[pinball]] game<ref>{{cite web|url=http://eeggs.com/items/763.html|title=Pinball in Word 97|work=The Easter Egg Archive}} </ref>. Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 contained a small, hidden video game named 'GORILLA.BAS'. The [[Palm OS|Palm]] operating system has elaborately hidden animations and other surprises. The Debian GNU/Linux package tool [[apt-get]] has an Easter egg involving an [[ASCII]] cow when variants on "apt-get moo" are typed into the shell. Another notable easter egg is from ''[[The MathWorks]]''' [[MATLAB]]: the '''why''' command provides succinct random answers to almost any question. |
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% why |
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% because the not very smart system engineer insisted on it |
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More elaborate Easter eggs include [[Level (video gaming)#Secret levels|secret levels]] and developers' rooms—fully functional, hidden areas of the game. Developers' rooms often include inside jokes from the [[fandom]] or development team and differ from a [[debug menu|debug room]] in that they are specifically intended for the player to find. Some games even include hidden [[minigame]]s as Easter eggs. In the [[LucasArts]] game ''[[Day of the Tentacle]]'' (1993), the original ''[[Maniac Mansion]]'' (1987) game can be played in its full version by using a home computer in a character's room.<ref name="Björk">{{cite book |author-last1=Björk |author-first1=Staffan |author-last2=Holopainen |author-first2=Jussi |title=Patterns In Game Design |date=2005 |publisher=Charles River Media |location=Hingham, Massachusetts, USA |isbn=9781584503545 |page=235 |edition=1st |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IFQfyODK4wAC&pg=PA235 |access-date=25 January 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Optical Information Systems Update/library & Information Center Applications |journal=CD-ROM World |date=February 1994 |volume=9 |issue=1–5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xwoQAQAAMAAJ&q=Day+of+the+Tentacle+easter+egg |access-date=4 November 2017 |publisher=Meckler Publishing |quote=The best Easter egg of all is the entire Maniac Mansion game, which appears on a computer in Doctor Fred's mansion. Users can play the original game in its entirety.}}</ref> Similarly, a programmer included the whole of ''[[TimeSplitters 2]]'' (2002) within ''[[Homefront: The Revolution]]'' (2016), accessed by using a special code at an in-game arcade cabinet.<ref>{{cite magazine |author-last=Stanton |author-first=Rich |title=Cheat code to play 4K Timesplitters 2 in Homefront: The Revolution revealed after 5 years |url=https://www.pcgamer.com/lost-cheat-code-to-play-4k-timesplitters-2-in-homefront-the-revolution-is-found/ |magazine=[[PC Gamer]] |access-date=10 April 2021 |date=9 April 2021}}</ref> |
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===Non-software=== |
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While computer-related Easter eggs are often found in [[software]], occasionally they exist in [[hardware]] or [[firmware]] of certain devices. On some [[personal computer|PC]]s, the [[BIOS]] [[Read-only memory|ROM]] contains Easter eggs. Notable examples include several early [[Apple Macintosh]] models which had pictures of the development team in the ROM (accessible by pressing the programmer's switch and jumping to a specific memory address, or other equally obscure means), and some errant 1993 AMI [[BIOS]] that on [[13 November]] proceeded to play "Happy Birthday" via the PC speaker over and over again instead of booting. Perhaps the most famous example of a hardware Easter egg is in the [[Hewlett-Packard|HP]] ScanJet 5P, where the device will play the ''[[Ode to Joy]]'' or ''[[Für Elise]]'' by varying the [[stepper motor]] speed if users power the device up with the scan button depressed. Another fun Easter egg is found in the [[Kurzweil Music Systems|Kurzweil]] K2x musical keyboard series ([[Kurzweil K2500|K2500]], [[Kurzweil K2600|K2600]] and others): if users type "Pong" while in search mode they can play the game ''[[Pong]]''. The EEPROM of Nagra smart cards for the [[Dish Network]] [[satellite television]] system contain the phrase "NipPEr Is a buTt liCkeR". Nipper was a hacker who broke old security routines on the cards, and this text is included as a fallback to old security routines, where the phrase was hashed against an input text to verify the card. Several ''[[Oscilloscopes]]'' have been known to contain Easter eggs. One example includes the HP 54622D known to play Asteroids. |
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Other Easter eggs originated unintentionally. The [[Konami Code]], a type of [[cheat code]], became an intentional Easter egg in most games, but it originated from Konami's ''[[Gradius]]'' (1985) for the [[Nintendo Entertainment System]]. The programmer, [[Kazuhisa Hashimoto]], created the code as a means to rapidly [[debug]] the game by giving the player's avatar additional health and powers to easily traverse the game. These types of codes are normally removed from the game before it is shipped but, in the case of ''Gradius'', Hashimoto forgot to remove it and the code was soon discovered by players. Its popularity inspired Konami to reuse the code and purposely retain it for many of its future games as an Easter egg.<ref name="Wolf"/><ref name="Björk"/><ref>{{cite web |author-last=Garmon |author-first=Jay |title=Geek Trivia: The cheat goes on |url=http://www.techrepublic.com/article/geek-trivia-the-cheat-goes-on/ |website=TechRepublic |access-date=16 April 2008 |date=5 March 2007}}</ref> |
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==Chip and PCB-based Easter eggs== |
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Technical issues may also create unintentional Easter eggs. [[Jon Burton]], founder of [[Traveller's Tales]], said that many seemingly apparent Easter eggs in their [[Sega Genesis]] games came about as a result of introducing programming tricks to get around some of the difficulty they had in getting Sega's strict certification for their games, [[Exception handling|catching any exceptions during execution]] to bring the game back to a usable state as to pass certification. For example, [[Cartridge tilting|hitting the side]] of the ''[[Sonic 3D Blast]]'' (1996) cartridge while it is slotted in the console will bring the game back to the Level Select screen, which Burton explains is the default exception handling for any unidentified processor error, such as when connectivity between the cartridge and the console's microprocessor is temporarily lost.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Orland |author-first=Kyle |title=How hitting a game cartridge unlocks gaming's weirdest Easter egg |url=https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2017/10/smack-cartridge-for-level-select-behind-gamings-weirdest-easter-egg/ |website=Ars Technica |access-date=4 October 2017 |date=4 October 2017}}</ref> |
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{{main|Chip art}} |
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==In computing== |
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[[Image:Chpsonic.jpg|right|frame|Easter egg inside an [[Analog Devices|ADSP]]-2181 chip: an etching of video game character [[Sonic the Hedgehog (character)|Sonic the Hedgehog]]]] |
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===Software=== |
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Many [[integrated circuit]] (chip) designers have included ''[[chip art|hidden artwork]]'', including assorted images, phrases, developer initials, logos, and so on. This artwork, like the rest of the chip, is reproduced in each copy by [[lithography]] and [[etching]]. These are visible only when the chip package is opened and examined under magnification, so they are, in a sense, more of an "[[in-joke|inside joke]]" than most of the Easter eggs included in software. |
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In [[computer software]], Easter eggs are secret responses that occur as a result of an undocumented set of commands. The results can vary from a simple printed message or image to a page of programmer credits or a small video game hidden inside an otherwise serious piece of software. |
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Originally, the Easter eggs served a useful purpose as well. Not unlike [[cartography|cartographers]] who may insert [[trap street]]s or nonexistent [[landscape]] features as a [[copyright infringement]] detection aid, IC designers may also build non-functional circuits on their chips to help them catch infringers. Easter eggs, however benign, if directly copied by the [[defendant]], could be used in [[mask work]] infringement litigation. Changes to the copyright laws (in the USA, the Semiconductor Chip Protection Act of 1984, and similar laws in other countries) now grant automatic exclusive rights to [[mask work]]s, and the Easter egg no longer serves any practical use. |
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In the [[TOPS-10]] operating system (for the DEC [[PDP-10]] [[mainframe computer]]), the {{code|make}} command is used to invoke the [[Text Editor and Corrector|TECO]] editor to create a file. If given the file name argument {{code|love}}, so that the command reads {{code|make love}}, it will pause and respond [[Make love, not war|{{code|not war?}}]] before creating the file.<ref name="Montfort">{{cite book |author-last1=Montfort |author-first1=Nick |author-last2=Bogost |author-first2=Ian |title=Racing the Beam: The Atari Video Computer System |date=2009 |publisher=[[MIT Press]] |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |isbn=9780262012577 |page=59 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DqePfdz_x6gC&pg=PA59 |access-date=25 January 2013}}</ref> The Easter egg was added sometime between October 1967 and October 1968 by William F. Weiher at the [[Stanford AI Lab]] to the COMPIL program for the PDP-6, which was then used in the TOPS-10 operating system, making it the first Easter egg in a software program.<ref name="Willaert">{{cite web |author-last=Willaert |author-first=Kate |title=Make Love Not War: Talking With The Creator Of The First Software Easter Egg |url=https://www.acriticalhit.com/make-love-not-war-first-software-easter-egg |website=A Critical Hit! |access-date=24 May 2021 |date=23 May 2021}}</ref> This same behavior occurs on the [[RSTS/E]] operating system, where TECO will provide this response.{{citation needed|date=January 2013}} Other [[Unix]] [[operating system]]s respond to "{{code|why}}" with "{{code|why not}}" (a reference to ''[[The Prisoner (computer game)|The Prisoner]]'' in [[BSD|Berkeley Unix]], 1977).{{citation needed|date=January 2013}} |
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[[Western Digital]]'s [[MyBook]] Pro has several words on the metal band that wraps around 3 sides in [[Morse Code]]. The code reads: |
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PERSONALRELIABLEINNOVATIVESIMPLE |
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INNOVATIVEPERSONALDESIGNRELIABLE |
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INNOVATIVEDESIGNPERSONALDESIGN |
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SIMPLEINNOVATIVE |
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Some versions of the DEC [[OpenVMS]] operating system have concealed [[exit status]] codes, including a reference to the [[Monty Python]] [[Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook]] skit; "{{code|exit %xb70}}" returns the message "%SYSTEM-W-FISH, my hovercraft is full of eels" while "{{code|exit %x34b4}}" returns a reference to an early [[Internet meme]]: "%SYSTEM-F-GAMEOVER, [[All your base are belong to us]]".<ref>{{cite web |title=OpenVMS Undocumented Features |url=https://www.parsec.com/os/openvms/undocumented.php?page=13 |website=PARSEC Group |access-date=6 April 2016}}</ref> |
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The [[Commodore International|Commodore]] [[Amiga]] models 500, 600 and 1200 each featured easter eggs, in the form of titles of songs by [[The B-52's]] etched on the [[motherboard]]s. The 500 says "[[Rock Lobster (song)|Rock Lobster]]", the 600 says "[[June Bug (song)|June Bug]]", and the 1200 says "[[Channel Z (song)|Channel Z]]". The Amiga OS software includes a variety of hidden messages as well.[http://www.amigahistory.co.uk/messages.html] |
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Easter eggs in the 1997 version of [[Microsoft Office]] include a hidden [[flight simulator]] in [[Microsoft Excel]] and a [[pinball]] game in [[Microsoft Word]].<ref>{{cite web |author1=Anonymous |title=Excel Easter Egg - Excel 97 Flight to Credits |url=http://eeggs.com/items/718.html |website=The Easter Egg Archive |access-date=4 January 2011 |date=19 July 1999}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author-last=Arima |author-first=Kevin |title=Word (Microsoft) Easter Egg - Pinball in Word 97 |url=http://eeggs.com/items/763.html |website=The Easter Egg Archive |access-date=4 January 2011 |date=20 July 2009}}</ref> Since 2002, Microsoft does not allow any hidden or undocumented code as part of its [[trustworthy computing]] initiative.<ref name="Larry">{{cite web |author-last=Osterman |author-first=Larry |title=Why no Easter Eggs? |url=https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/larryosterman/why-no-easter-eggs |website=Larry Osterman's WebLog |publisher=[[Microsoft Docs]] |date=21 October 2005 |access-date=10 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210331003753/https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/larryosterman/why-no-easter-eggs |archive-date=31 March 2021 |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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==Video game Easter eggs== |
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[[Image:YarsRevengeEasterEGG.JPG|thumbnail|right|240px|The Easter egg in the [[Atari 2600]] game ''[[Yars' Revenge]]'': displaying the programmer's initials, "HSWWSH".]] |
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<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:The Megg still.jpg|right|thumb|The "Megg".]] --> |
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The [[Debian]] operating system's package tool [[apt-get]] has an Easter egg involving an [[ASCII]] cow when variants on {{code|apt-get moo}} are typed into the shell.<ref>{{cite book |author-last1=Grant |author-first1=Rickford with |author-last2=Bull |author-first2=Phil |title=Ubuntu for Non-Geeks: A Pain-Free, Get-Things-Done Guide |date=2010 |publisher=[[No Starch Press]] |location=San Francisco, California, USA |isbn=9781593272579 |page=168 |edition=4th |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lNylcIBk1xsC&q=apt-get+moo&pg=PA168 |access-date=25 January 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=apt-private/private-moo.cc |website=main - APT Developers / apt - GitLab |date=12 July 2017 |url=https://salsa.debian.org/apt-team/apt/-/blob/main/apt-private/private-moo.cc |access-date=30 January 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=cmdline/apt-get.cc |url=https://salsa.debian.org/apt-team/apt/-/blob/main/cmdline/apt-get.cc#L432 |website=main - APT Developers / apt - GitLab |date=28 October 2022 |access-date=30 January 2023}}</ref> |
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Easter eggs in [[computer and video games]] are distinguished from ''[[cheat code]]s'' which allow players to cheat — see ''[[Minesweeper (computer game)|Minesweeper]]'' for an example. |
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[[File:Android easter eggs (version 2.3 to 10).gif|thumb|Animation showing Easter eggs in Google's [[Android (operating system)|Android]] operating system]] |
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An Easter egg is found on all Microsoft Windows operating systems before [[Windows XP|XP]]. In the 3D Text [[screen saver]], entering the text "volcano" will display the names of all the [[volcano]]es in the United States. Microsoft removed this Easter egg in XP but added others.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Hoye |author-first=David |title='Easter egg' hunts can turn up surprises |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=SB&p_theme=sb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0F9C5967DFAD25DD&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D |website=Newsbank |publisher=[[The Sacramento Bee]] |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=13 March 2003}}{{subscription required}}</ref> In Windows Vista and later, by launching a screensaver executable (introduced with Windows Vista) on the command line with the <code>/p65552</code> flag, for example launching the "bubbles" screen saver with <code>bubbles.scr /p65552</code> command-line parameter, it runs as [[desktop wallpaper]].<ref>{{cite web |title=How to run Screensaver as Wallpaper in Windows 11/10 |url=https://www.thewindowsclub.com/run-screensaver-as-wallpaper-windows |website=The Windows Club |access-date=27 February 2022 |date=18 March 2019}}</ref> [[Microsoft Excel 95|Microsoft Excel 95]] contains a hidden action game similar to ''[[Doom (1993 video game)|Doom]]'' (1993) called ''The Hall of Tortured Souls''.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Gaskell |author-first=John |title=Excel Easter Egg - Excel 95 Hall of Tortured Souls |url=http://www.eeggs.com/items/719.html |website=The Easter Egg Archive |access-date=30 April 2009 |date=19 July 1999}}</ref> |
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The Google search engine famously [[List of Google Easter eggs|contains many Easter eggs]], given to the user in response to certain search queries.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Sherman |author-first=Chris |title=Updated: The big list of Google Easter eggs |url=https://searchengineland.com/the-big-list-of-google-easter-eggs-153768 |website=[[Danny Sullivan (technologist)#Search Engine Land|Search Engine Land]] |access-date=22 November 2020 |date=9 October 2018}}</ref> |
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The tradition of including Easter eggs in video games has created small sections of gaming [[fandom]] that are as devoted to finding Easter eggs as they are to playing games as they are intended. In [[Taito Corporation|Taito]]'s [[1986]] arcade game ''Land-Sea-Air Squad'', some of the destructible buildings yielded a winged angel and 20,000 points if hit the right number of times. |
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[[Steve Jobs]] banned Easter eggs from Apple products upon his return to the company.<ref name="Diaz">{{cite web |author-last=Diaz |author-first=Jesus |title=The Easter Eggs Are Back in OS X—And This One Is Insanely Great |url=https://gizmodo.com/5929286/the-easter-eggs-are-back-in-os-xand-this-one-is-insanely-great |website=Gizmodo |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=26 July 2012}}</ref> The first Easter egg to appear after his death is in a 2012 update to the [[Mac App Store]] for [[OS X Mountain Lion]], in which downloaded apps are temporarily [[timestamp]]ed as "24 January 1984", the date of the sales launch of the original [[Mac (computer)|Macintosh]].<ref name="Diaz" /> |
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A video game series famed for its Easter eggs is the ''[[Grand Theft Auto]]'' series. In ''[[Grand Theft Auto III]]'' there is a sign on one of the walls of a hard-to-access alleyway saying "you weren't supposed to be able to get here you know". An actual chocolate Easter egg is hidden in a secret room in ''[[Grand Theft Auto: Vice City]]''. This was referenced in the sequel ''[[Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas|San Andreas]]'' by a sign on top of a tower of a [[Golden Gate Bridge]]-clone that reads "There are no Easter eggs up here. Go away." The GTA III alleyway Easter egg was seen again in the [[PlayStation Portable]] game ''[[Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories]]'', where the same wall said "Hello again" with a smiley face. The same game was later released on [[PlayStation 2]], with the wall this time saying "You just can't get enough of this alley, can you?" with a smiley face with its tongue stuck out. Another Vice City easter egg is that certain air conditioners if zoomed in on will read "George's Bug". |
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The [[Python (programming language)|Python]] programming language and its ecosystem of libraries include various Easter eggs.<ref>{{cite web |title=OrkoHunter/python-easter-eggs: Curated list of all the easter eggs and hidden jokes in Python |url=https://github.com/OrkoHunter/python-easter-eggs |website=[[GitHub]] |access-date=27 August 2021 |date=9 August 2019}}</ref> |
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Controversy was stirred when the [[Hot Coffee mod]] for [[Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas]] revealed a hidden sex simulation. |
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===Firmware=== |
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Another very famous Easter egg is the "Megg" from the video game ''[[Halo (video game series)|Halo]]''. It is an elaborate sequence that allows players to see a heart with an M in the middle, made with blood splatters. It is called the Megg after Megan, the girlfriend of one of the programmers. The Megg was never supposed to be seen by anyone except him and his girlfriend. |
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While computer-related Easter eggs are often found in installed [[software]], occasionally they exist in the [[firmware]] of certain devices. On some [[home computer|home]] and early [[personal computer]]s the [[read-only memory|ROM]] contains Easter eggs, including lists of the developers' names, political exhortations, snatches of music, or images of the entire development team. |
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The [[palmtop PC]] [[Hewlett-Packard|HP]] [[HP 200LX#Easter eggs|200LX]] (1994)<!-- the [[HP 100LX]] (1993) might have included these Easter eggs as well, but I'm not sure about it; the earlier [[HP 95LX]] (1991) at least has some poems in test mode already. --> includes an undocumented hex calculator [[HEXCALC.EXM]]. The built-in maze game "Lair of Squid" incorporates a hidden gallery of the software developers. In test mode it displays several poems. |
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There are many other easter eggs in the Halo series, probably the most famous being "The Skulls" found in ''Halo 2''. The skulls are objects that you can pick up that activate different effects like "intensified" explosions. A guide with descriptions and videos of the skulls and other Halo easter eggs can be found at [http://www.haloeastereggs.co.nr Halo Easter Eggs]. |
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Other notable examples include some versions of the [[AMI BIOS]] that on 13 November 1993, proceeded to play "Happy Birthday" via the PC speaker repeatedly instead of [[booting]],<ref>{{cite web |title=Happy Birthday Description |url=http://www.f-secure.com/v-descs/birthday.shtml |website=F-Secure Labs |access-date=3 July 2012}}</ref> as well as several early [[Apple Macintosh]] models that have photos of the development team in the ROM. These Mac Easter eggs were well-publicized in the Macintosh press at the time<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Kendig |author-first=Brian |title=Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List |url=http://www.ralentz.com/old/mac/faqs/source/easter-eggs.html |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=1994 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171107024006/http://www.ralentz.com/old/mac/faqs/source/easter-eggs.html |archive-date=7 November 2017 |url-status=dead}}</ref> along with the means to access them, and were later recovered by an NYC Resistor team, a [[Hacker space|hacker collective]], through elaborate [[reverse engineering]].<ref>{{cite web |author1=hudson |title=Ghosts in the ROM |url=http://www.nycresistor.com/2012/08/21/ghosts-in-the-rom/|website=NYC Resistor |access-date=23 March 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150217050949/http://www.nycresistor.com/2012/08/21/ghosts-in-the-rom/ |archive-date=17 February 2015 |date=21 August 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author-last=Tirosh |author-first=Udi |title=Photographs Of Apple Team Found In 25 Years Old Macintosh SE |url=http://diyphotography.net/photographs-of-apple-team-found-in-25-years-old-macintosh-se |website=DIY Photography |access-date=4 November 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130226150444/http://diyphotography.net/photographs-of-apple-team-found-in-25-years-old-macintosh-se |archive-date=26 February 2013 |date=22 August 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Similarly, the [[Radio Shack]] [[TRS-80 Color Computer 3|Color Computer 3]]'s ROM contains code which displays what looks like three [[Microware]] developers on a [[Control key|{{key press|Ctrl}}]]+[[Alt key|{{key press|Alt}}]]+[[Reset button|{{key press|Reset}}]] keypress sequence—a hard reset which discards any information currently in [[Random-access memory|RAM]].<ref>{{cite journal |title=The World of 68' Micros |date=May 1998 |volume=5 |issue=6 |page=5 |url=https://archive.org/stream/World_of_68_Micros_The_Vol._5_Number_6_1998-05_FARNA_Systems_US/World_of_68_Micros_The_Vol._5_Number_6_1998-05_FARNA_Systems_US_djvu.txt |access-date=4 November 2017 |publisher=FARNA Systems}}</ref> |
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On the bonus disc for the ''Halo 2: Limited Collector's Edition'', if the left button is held for ten seconds, a hidden fan work gallery will appear. |
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Several [[oscilloscope]]s contain Easter eggs. One example is the HP 54600B{{when|reason=To put this into perspective timewise, when was the HP 54600B introduced? (The HP 54600A was introduced in 1992, the switch to Agilent happened in 1999. The manual has copyright dates "1992, 1997", so it might have been introduced in 1997, but I'm not sure about it.)|date=May 2022}}, known to have a ''[[Tetris (video game)|Tetris]]'' (1985) clone,<ref>{{cite web |author1=kcbhiw |title=HP 54600B Oscilloscope Easter Egg - Tetris Within Oscilloscope |url=http://www.eeggs.com/items/28801.html |website=The Easter Egg Archive |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=24 July 2001}}</ref> and the HP 54622D{{when|reason=To put this into perspective timewise, when was the HP 54622D introduced? (It must have been before the switch to Agilent in 1999, who continued to sell the oscilloscope as "Agilent HP 54622D".)|date=May 2022}} contains an imitation of the ''[[Asteroids (video game)|Asteroids]]'' (1979) game named ''Rocks''.<ref>{{cite web |author1=TonyK |title=HP 54622D Easter Egg - HP Asteroids |url=http://www.eeggs.com/items/34063.html |website=The Easter Egg Archive |access-date=11 March 2015 |date=24 April 2002}}</ref> Another is the [[Tektronix]] 1755A{{when|reason=To put this into perspective timewise, in which year was the Tektronix 1755A introduced?|date=May 2022}} Vector and Waveform Monitor which displays swimming fish when Remote > Software version is selected on the CONFIG menu.<ref>{{cite web |author1=Pavel |title=Tektronix 1751 Digital Video Osciloscope / Vectorscope Easter Egg - Fishes Swimming on Screen |url=http://www.eeggs.com/items/10043.html |website=The Easter Egg Archive |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=8 April 2000}}</ref> |
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Another example would be the ones that can be found in the popular [[Valve Corporation|Valve]] game, ''[[Counter-Strike]]''. For example, in the level "[[cs estate|Estate]]", when dead (in Free-View mode), players can slide under the house (using the mouse to direct, and the keyboard to go forward and backwards), to see a cube-shaped Easter egg containing the author's names and one of the programmers' pictures entitled "Tofu X", showing him attempting to drink a bottle of [[Windex]]. |
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In the second and third hardware revision of the [[Minolta Maxxum 9|Minolta Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9]] (introduced in 1998) [[Single-lens reflex camera|SLR]] camera, including all SSM/ADI upgraded bodies (since 2003), an undocumented button sequence can be utilized to reconfigure the camera to behave like the Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9Ti (1999) and subsequently invoke support for the limited model's extra functions also in the black model.<ref name="Paul_2010">{{cite web |title=Zusätzliche Funktionen für die Minolta Dynax 9 - Kleine Bescherung: Und es geht doch - 9Ti-Funktionen für Dynax 9 |language=de |trans-title=Extra functions for the Dynax 9 - a little Christmas present: Against all odds, it works: 9Ti functions on the Dynax 9 |author-first=Matthias R. |author-last=Paul |date=2010-12-24 |work=Mi-Fo |url=http://www.mi-fo.de/forum/index.php?showtopic=28555 |access-date=2014-05-01 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160723113011/http://www.mi-fo.de/forum/index.php?showtopic=28555 |archive-date=2016-07-23}} (NB. Description of an undocumented activation procedure to enable the extra functions of the Minolta Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9Ti limited edition model on all standard black Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9 bodies equipped with second and third PCB revision, including all bodies with SSM/ADI upgrade.)</ref><ref name="Conny1_2010">{{cite web |title=Belated Christmas gift for Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9 <!-- |author-first=Rolf |author-last=Conny1??? --> |work=Dyxum |date=2010-12-28 |url=https://www.dyxum.com/dforum/topic71107.html |access-date=2022-05-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220518102900/https://www.dyxum.com/dforum/belated-christmas-gift-for-dynax-maxxum-alpha-9_topic71107.html |archive-date=2022-05-18}}</ref><ref name="Slipsale_2011">{{cite web |title=Upgrade des fonctionnalités du D9 en D9Ti gratuite |language=fr |trans-title=Upgrade of the functions of the D9 and D9Ti free |author=<!-- Slipsale --> |work=AlphaDxD |date=2011-01-05 |url=https://www.alphadxd.fr/viewtopic.php?f=118&t=54935 |access-date=2022-05-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220518104420/https://www.alphadxd.fr/viewtopic.php?f=118&t=54935 |archive-date=2022-05-18}}</ref><ref name="Paul_2006">{{cite web |title=Maxxum 9 Update? |author-first=Matthias R. |author-last=Paul |work=[[Shutterbug (magazine)|Shutterbug]] |date=2006-06-25 |url=http://forum.shutterbug.com/forum/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=7414&an=0&page=0#Post7414 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061027021407/http://forum.shutterbug.com/forum/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=7414&an=0&page=0#Post7414 |archive-date=2006-10-27 |quote=[…] the SSM/ADI upgrade does not incorporate upgrading a black body to 9Ti specs, functions-wise. That is, the extra custom functions (except for 20-4) still do not normally exist on black bodies after the upgrade. Of course, 9Ti bodies do not lose their extra functions during the upgrade. […] Die-hard Minolta fans of the "black beauty" may feel free to contact […] if their camera body is either SSM/ADI upgraded already or shows the above mentioned improved behaviour. I may have some extra sweets for you... […]}} (NB. Not related to the undocumented button sequence revealed in the {{citeref|Paul|2010|2010 post|style=plain}} but giving general background on the subtle differences of the camera variants and already hinting on a more elaborate internal configuration file manipulation hack to switch camera profiles.)</ref> |
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In the [[Nintendo 64]] classic, ''[[Perfect Dark]]'', pieces of cheese that had originally served as a method of unlocking cheats (scrapped due to lack of time) could be found in every level. |
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One of HP's electronic pocket [[calculator]]s, the [[HP-45]] (introduced in 1973), has a built-in undocumented [[stopwatch]].<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.decodesystems.com/hp45-stopwatch.html |title=How To Use The HP-45 Calculator As a Stopwatch Or Elapsed-time Indicator |author-first=Paul E. |author-last=Miller |magazine=[[Popular Electronics]] |date=June 1976}}</ref> |
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Some computer-era [[pinball]] games also included Easter eggs, triggered by pressing the flipper and start buttons in certain sequences. For example, ''[[The Addams Family]]'' pinball game included two Easter eggs showing extended credits and chainsaw-wielding cows. Cows are used as Easter eggs in many [[pinball]] games. |
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The firmware of HP's [[HP ScanJet|ScanJet 5p]] [[image scanner]] contains an easter egg wherein, on a cold power-on, holding down the scan button when the SCSI ID selector on the back is set to "0" will cause the ScanJet to play a rendition of [[Friedrich Schiller|Schiller]]'s "[[Ode to Joy]]", by modulating the speed of the audible stepper motor drive to produce specific pitches.<ref>{{cite journal | last=Bombay | first=Emilio | date=October 29, 1998 | url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/273693106/ | title=Have your eyes checked, too | journal=Fort Worth Star-Telegram | page=3 | via=ProQuest}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Colvey | first=Scott | date=April 25, 2000 | url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/329268726/ | title=How you can crack the Easter egg codes | journal=Evening Standard | page=55 | via=ProQuest}}</ref> |
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In ''[[Max Payne]]'' and ''[[Max Payne 2]]'', Easter eggs included a memorial to a deceased developer, a radio that plays a message from the programmers, and an in-joke that creates a series of moving fireballs, intending to make the level a [[Mario]]-like endeavour. |
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===Hardware=== |
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Text-based games often include hidden messages which appear when the user types specific words into the computer. For example, the ''[[Zork]]'' series contains a number of these which become running gags and can be used with different results in each game. |
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The [[Amiga 1000|Commodore Amiga 1000]] computer includes the signatures of the design and development team embossed on the inside of the case, including Jay Miner and the paw print of his dog, Mitchy.<ref>{{cite book |author-last=Corrigan |author-first=Patricia |title=Bringing Science to Life: A Guide from the Saint Louis Science |date=2007 |publisher=Reedy Press |location=St. Louis, Missouri, USA |isbn=9781933370163 |page=69}}</ref> The [[Commodore International|Commodore]] [[Amiga]] models 500, 600, and 1200 each feature Easter eggs in the form of song titles by [[the B-52's]] as white printing on the [[motherboard]]s. The 500 says "[[Rock Lobster (song)|B52/Rock Lobster]]", the 600 says "[[Cosmic Thing|June Bug]]", and the 1200 says "[[Channel Z (song)|Channel Z]]".<ref>{{cite journal |title= |journal=Compute! |volume=12 |issue=6–9 |publisher=Small System Service |date=1990}}</ref> The [[Amiga OS]] software contains hidden messages.<ref>{{cite book |author-last=Petersen |author-first=Julie K. |title=The Telecommunications Illustrated Dictionary |date=2002 |publisher=[[CRC Press]] |location=Boca Raton, Florida, USA |isbn=9780849311734 |page=293 |edition=2nd |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b2mMzS0hCkAC&pg=PA293 |access-date=24 January 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author-last=Hyman |author-first=Michael |title=PC Roadkill |date=1995 |publisher=Programmers Press |location=Foster City, California, USA |isbn=9781568843483 |page=c |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3eTCYYYaTC8C&q=amiga+os+software+hidden+messages |access-date=24 January 2013}}</ref> |
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Many [[integrated circuit]] (chip) designers have included hidden graphics elements termed [[chip art]], including images, phrases, developer initials, logos, and more. This artwork, like the rest of the chip, is reproduced in each copy by [[lithography]] and [[etching]]. These are visible only when the chip package is opened and examined under magnification.<ref name="cvax">{{cite web |author-first=Bob |author-last=Supnik |title=CVAX |url=http://simh.trailing-edge.com/semi/cvax.html |website=Computer Simulation and History |access-date=23 May 2019 |date=24 February 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150117182438/http://simh.trailing-edge.com/semi/cvax.html |archive-date=17 January 2015 |url-status=live}}</ref> The 1984 CVAX microchip implementation of the [[MicroVAX]] CPU contains in its etchings the [[Russian language|Russian]] phrase in the [[Cyrillic script|Cyrillic]] alphabet "VAX: When you care enough to steal the very best",<ref>{{cite web |title=Steal The Best |url=https://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/creatures/pages/russians.html |website=Molecular Expressions: The Silicon Zoo |access-date=16 May 2019 |date=7 July 1999}}</ref> placed there because, "knowing that some CVAXs would end up in the USSR, the team wanted the Russians to know that we were thinking of them".<ref name="cvax"/> |
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In the video game ''[[Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick Obscura]]'', there was an in-game myth of a monster capable of transforming to a blue bunny. After completing a quest in the game related to this myth and seemingly proving that the myth was a hoax, the player has a chance to encounter and be stopped by a blue bunny while traveling in the world. If the player attacked the bunny, it would instantly transform into a giant monster. |
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Another notable example is the [[Nintendo Switch Pro Controller|pro controller]] for the [[Nintendo Switch]], on the controller's [[motherboard]], if a player holds down on the right stick and looks closely into the transparent plastic surrounding its socket while shining a light on it, there is a hidden message that reads "THX2ALLGAMEFANS!". The message was discovered by Japanese Twitter user Geo Stream on March 4, 2017, one day after the Switch's launch. |
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The ''[[Fallout (computer game)]]'' series has many pop-culture references and easter eggs, one of them being an actual (and useless) [[faberge egg]]. |
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==Comics== |
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In the SNES game ''[[Chrono Trigger]]'', if you beat the game in a very difficult and specific way you will be brought to an area in the game that is then populated by the game developers. You can talk to them and some will ask you questions like how you liked the game, and others will have side conversation, like about how a particular sports team is doing. |
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American [[comic book]] artists are known to include hidden messages in their art:<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Cronin |author-first=Brian |title=Comic Book Easter Eggs Archive! |url=http://www.cbr.com/comic-book-easter-eggs-archive/ |website=[[Comic Book Resources]] |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=1 July 2011}}</ref> |
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* In a reprint of classic ''[[Captain America]]'' comics, a production artist drew a penis on [[Bucky Barnes]].<ref name="Johnston">{{cite web |author-last=Johnston |author-first=Rich |author-link=Rich Johnston |title=Marvel Artist Ardian Syaf Hid Antisemitic And Anti-Christian Messages In This Week's X-Men Comic |url=https://www.bleedingcool.com/2017/04/08/marvel-artist-ardian-syaf-hid-anti-christian-jewish-messages-weeks-x-men-comic/ |website=[[Bleeding Cool]] |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=8 April 2017 |quote=And there was the time a production artist drew a penis on Bucky in classic Captain America archive reprints.}}</ref> |
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In the game ''[[Ultimate Doom]]'' there is a secret room which features the symbol of the band [[Nine Inch Nails]] on the ceiling and the floor. [[Trent Reznor]] is a fan of the ''Doom'' games and has helped contribute music and other work for ''[[Quake]]'', another [[id Software]] title. |
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* In 2000, [[Al Milgrom]] inserted a message into ''[[Universe X: Spidey]]'' #1 insulting his previous boss, Marvel Editor in Chief [[Bob Harras]], following Harras' termination from [[Marvel Comics]]. On Page 28, panel 3, the spines of books on a bookshelf in the background read, "HARRAS HA HA, HE'S GONE, GOOD RIDDANCE TO BAD RUBBISH HE WAS A NASTY S.O.B." The message was spotted after the book was printed but before it went on sale; the copies that were printed for consumers were destroyed. However, 4,000 preview copies were distributed to retailers as part of a "[[First-look deal|First Look]]" deal, and these are today considered rare collectors' items. Milgrom was "apparently fired and allegedly (and quietly) re-hired several weeks later".<ref name="Johnston"/><ref>{{cite web |author-last=McCallum |author-first=Diana |title=6 Comic Book Easter Eggs That Stuck It to The Man |url=http://www.cracked.com/article_18984_6-comic-book-easter-eggs-that-stuck-it-to-man.html |website=[[Cracked.com]] |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=4 February 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Universe X Spidey 1 Harras Slander Variant |url=https://recalledcomics.com/UniverseXSpidey1RecalledHarras.php |website=Recalled Comics |access-date=30 January 2023}}</ref> |
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* [[Ethan Van Sciver]] hid the word "sex" in the background of nearly every page of ''[[New X-Men (2001 series)|New X-Men]]'' #118 (November 2001).<ref name="Johnston"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Cronin |first1=Brian |title=Comic Book Easter Eggs - New "Se"X-Men #118 Edition! |url=http://www.cbr.com/comic-book-easter-eggs-new-sex-men-118-edition/ |website=Comic Book Resources |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=19 July 2011}}</ref> Van Sciver subsequently stated that he hid the word throughout the book because he was annoyed with Marvel at the time for reasons he cannot remember, and thought it would be fun to engage in some mischief with his work.{{Citation needed|date=November 2017}} |
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* Indonesian artist [[Ardian Syaf]] is known to engage in the practice of hiding Easter egg references to political figures in the backgrounds of his artwork. In ''[[Batgirl]]'' (vol. 4) #9 (July 2012), Syaf included a storefront sign that referenced the [[President of Indonesia]], [[Joko Widodo]], although the text that accompanies the image of Widodo is covered by a caption.<ref name="Johnston"/><ref>{{cite comic |writer=[[Gail Simone]] |penciller=[[Ardian Syaf]] |inker=Vicente Cifuentes |story=In the Line of Fire |title=[[Batgirl]] |volume=4 |issue=9 |date=July 2012 |publisher=[[DC Comics]]}}</ref> In April 2017, he caused [[Ardian Syaf#Easter egg references and X-Men Gold controversy|an outcry]] by placing Easter egg references to the [[November 2016 Jakarta protests]] into the pages of ''[[X-Men Gold]]'' #1, which were perceived by readers to be [[anti-Semitic]] and [[anti-Christian]]. Though Syaf acknowledged the political nature of the messages,<ref name="Johnston"/><ref>{{cite web |author-last=Lovett |author-first=Jamie |title=Marvel Releases Statement On Controversial X-Men Gold Art |url=http://comicbook.com/marvel/2017/04/08/marvel-releases-statement-on-controversial-x-men-gold-art/ |website=ComicBook.com |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=8 April 2017}}</ref> he stated that they were not intended to express any anti-Semitic nor anti-Christian sentiment on his part.<ref>{{cite web |title=Buni Yani Questioned Again in Cyber Harassment Case |url=http://www.jakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/news/buni-yani-questioned-again-in-cyber-harrasment-case/ |website=[[Jakarta Globe]] |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=January 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170221010020/http://www.jakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/news/buni-yani-questioned-again-in-cyber-harrasment-case/ |archive-date=21 February 2017 |url-status=dead}}</ref> In response to these Easter eggs, Marvel terminated their contract with Syaf.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Brown |author-first=Tracy |title=Today in Entertainment: Inside Disney's Pandora; Fyre Fest's apology; and 'Hamilton' ticket details |url=http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-entertainment-news-updates-april-marvel-officially-terminates-x-men-1491945410-htmlstory.html |website=Los Angeles Times |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=11 April 2017}}</ref> |
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==Video== |
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In the game "[[Doom II]]", in the last level, where the player must fight with an enormous alien face that spawns monster around him, there's an Easter Egg in the "brain" of the monster. To win, a couple of rockets must be fired in a hole in the head of the creature, but through a cheat mode you can fly inside the head and see that actually the explosions take place on a photo of John Romero, id Software (ex) main programmer and founder. This could be interpreted that he was the "brain" behind all the aliens the player fought. |
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===Home media=== |
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Easter eggs are found on films, [[DVD]]s, and [[Blu-ray Disc]]s, often as deleted scenes or bonus features.<ref>{{cite book |title=DVD Confidential: Hundreds of Hidden Easter Eggs Revealed |author-last=Saltzman |author-first=Marc |publisher=McGraw-Hill Osborne Media |isbn=9780072226638 |date=2002}}</ref><ref name="Klinger">{{cite book |author-last1=Bennett |author-first1=James |author-last2=Brown |author-first2=Tom |title=Film and television after DVD |date=2008 |publisher=Routledge |location=New York, USA |isbn=9780415962414 |page=23 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7uVCwa2mzFMC&pg=PA38 |access-date=22 January 2013 |chapter=The DVD Cinephile: Viewing Heritages and Home Film Cultures}}</ref><ref name="Berard">{{cite book |author-last1=Berardinelli |author-first1=James |author-last2=Ebert |author-first2=Roger |title=Reel Views 2: The Ultimate Guide to the Best 1,000 Modern Movies on DVD and Video, Volume 2 |date=2005 |publisher=Justin, Charles & Co. |location=Boston, USA |isbn=9781932112405 |page=577 |edition=1st U.S |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y1LmH8ld1yoC&pg=PT590 |access-date=22 January 2013 |chapter=Appendix: Easter Eggs, Extended Editions, and Director's Cuts}}</ref> Klinger states that their presence is "another signifier of artistry in the world of DVD supplements."<ref name="Klinger"/> According to American [[Film criticism|film critics]] [[James Berardinelli]] and [[Roger Ebert]], most DVDs do not contain them and most examples are "inconsequential", but a few, such as the one found on the ''[[Memento (film)|Memento]]'' DVD release, are "worth the effort to seek out".<ref name="Berard"/> |
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<!-- Doctor Who "Blink" episode Easter Egg info in "In popular culture. Do not re-add here." --> |
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===Broadcast media=== |
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In ''[[Banjo-Kazooie]]'', an Easter Egg can be given if the player obtains the Jiggy from the sandcastle in Treasure Trove Cove, returns to Banjo's house in Spiral Mountain, stands on the yellow lines on the carpet closest to the fireplace, and then switches to first-person view and looks at the picture of Bottles the mole, he will offer the player a chance to complete a "moving picture" puzzle in which the player will receive codes to alter Banjo's looks, such as enlarging his head or making him tall and thin, whereas the final code will turn him into a washing machine. However, this does not affect gameplay. Another easter egg is gotten at the end of the game, once the player collects all 100 Jiggies, where Mumbo Jumbo reveals information about the sequel, ''[[Banjo-Tooie]]''. |
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Unlike DVDs and computer games, broadcast radio and television programs contain no executable code. Easter eggs may still appear in the content itself, such as a [[hidden Mickey]] in a Disney film or a real telephone number instead of a [[555 (telephone number)|555]] [[fictitious telephone number]].{{Original research inline|date=November 2017}} A [[2014 Super Bowl]] advertisement was leaked online in which a lady gives a man a real telephone number, which the advertiser had hidden as a marketing ploy; the first caller to the number received a pair of tickets to the game.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Merda |author-first=Chad |title=Easter egg in Old Spice Super Bowl ad yields two tickets to curious fan |url=http://voices.suntimes.com/news/easter-egg-in-old-spice-super-bowl-ad-yields-two-tickets-to-curious-fan/ |website=Chicago Sun-Times |access-date=11 March 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402091642/http://voices.suntimes.com/news/easter-egg-in-old-spice-super-bowl-ad-yields-two-tickets-to-curious-fan/ |archive-date=2 April 2015 |date=30 January 2014}}</ref> The 1980s animated series ''[[She-Ra: Princess of Power]]'' featured a character named [[Loo-Kee]] who typically appeared once per episode, hidden in a single screenshot. At the end of the episode, the screenshot would be shown again and Loo-Kee would challenge viewers to locate him before revealing his hiding place.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Bricken |author-first=Rob |title=Every She-Ra: Princess Of Power Figure, Ranked |url=https://io9.gizmodo.com/every-she-ra-princess-of-power-figure-ranked-1706814141 |website=io9 |access-date=12 April 2018 |date=25 May 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author-last=DePiano |author-first=Hillary |title=The She-Ra Collector's Inventory: an Unofficial Illustrated Guide to All Princess of Power Toys and Accessories |date=2006 |publisher=Priced Nostalgia Press |isbn=9781411631281 |page=33 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tcQgHlVoRLMC&pg=PA33 |access-date=12 April 2018}}</ref> ''[[Adventure Time]]'' also had a character known as The Snail that was hidden in almost every episode of the show.<ref>{{Cite web |last=D'Onofrio |first=Matthew |date=2021-05-14 |title=10 Things Only Die-Hard Fans Of The Series Will Notice In Adventure Time: Distant Lands |url=https://gamerant.com/adventure-time-distant-lands-easter-eggs/ |access-date=2022-11-22 |website=Game Rant |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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More recent broadcast media, where viewers have access to high-resolution digital copies or streaming services, may include further Easter eggs that can only be found by freezing the show at certain points. In the anthology series ''[[Black Mirror]]'', the producers have included Easter eggs that reference past episodes, or tie into future episodes, as a means of loosely tying together all episodes into a single ''Black Mirror'' universe.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/black-mirror-season-4-episodes-charlie-brooker-annabel-jones-interview-spoilers-1033807 |title='Black Mirror' Bosses on "San Junipero" Sequel and an Unpredictable Season 4 |author-first=Jackie |author-last=Strause |date=7 September 2017 |access-date=14 December 2017 |website=[[The Hollywood Reporter]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171215053422/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/black-mirror-season-4-episodes-charlie-brooker-annabel-jones-interview-spoilers-1033807 |archive-date=15 December 2017 |url-status=live}}</ref> The [[Netflix]] series ''[[Stranger Things]]'' had a real-world Easter Egg where a pizza delivery van featured in the show's fourth season had the phone number (805) 45-PIZZA shown on its side. If that number, which translated to 805-457-4992 was dialed, it led to a special message from Argyle, the fictional restaurant's delivery driver.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.polygon.com/platform/amp/stranger-things/23200060/stranger-things-surfer-boy-pizza-number-phone-easter-egg-argyle-message|title=Stranger Things' Surfer Boy Pizza number really lets you call Argyle|author-first=Austen |author-last=Goslin |date=8 July 2022 |access-date=18 July 2022 |website=Polygon }}</ref> |
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In [[Wii Sports]] (Bowling), on the second stage of the training, on the last lane, throwing the ball to the side in a certain way triggers an explosion, resulting in dropping all 91 pins. |
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==Security concerns== |
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Security author Michel E. Kabay discussed security concerns of Easter eggs in 2000, saying that, while software quality assurance requires that all code be tested, it is not known whether Easter eggs are. He said that, as they tend to be held as programming secrets from the rest of the product testing process, a "[[logic bomb]]" could also bypass testing. Kabay asserts that this undermined the [[Trusted Computing Base]], a paradigm of trustworthy hardware and software in place since the 1980s, and is of concern wherever personal or confidential information is stored, as this may then be vulnerable to damage or manipulation.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Kabay |author-first1=M. E. |title=Easter eggs and the Trusted Computing Base |url=http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/sec/0327sec1.html |website=Network World |access-date=4 November 2017 |date=27 March 2000 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060615213259/http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/sec/0327sec1.html |archive-date=15 June 2006}}</ref><!-- For this reason, many developers have stopped the practice of adding Easter eggs to their software. -- UNSOURCED since 15 May 2006, highly replicated after that. Do not add back without earlier source. --Lexein. See Talk. --> Microsoft created some of the largest and most elaborate Easter eggs, such as those in [[Microsoft Office]].<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Schultz |author-first=Greg |title=Take a look back at Microsoft Word Easter Eggs |url=http://www.zdnet.com/photos/take-a-look-back-at-microsoft-word-easter-eggs_p6/160791#photo |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130103151827/http://www.zdnet.com/photos/take-a-look-back-at-microsoft-word-easter-eggs_p6/160791#photo |url-status=dead |archive-date=3 January 2013 |website=ZDNet |access-date=5 October 2012 |date=29 August 2010 |quote=Microsoft's developers hid multiple Easter Eggs in Word 95/97/2000.}}</ref> In 2005, Larry Osterman of Microsoft acknowledged Microsoft Easter eggs, and his involvement in development of one, but described them as "irresponsible", and wrote that the company's [[Operating System]] division "has a 'no Easter Eggs' policy" as part of its [[Trustworthy Computing]] initiative.<ref name="Larry"/> |
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In 2006, [[Douglas W. Jones]] said that while "some Easter eggs may be [[copyright trap|intentional tools used to detect illegal copying]], others are clearly examples of unauthorized functionality that has slipped through the quality-control tests at the vendor". While hidden Easter eggs themselves are harmless, it may be possible for [[malware]] to be hidden in similar ways in voting machines or other computers.<ref>{{cite journal |author-last=Neuman |author-first=Peter G. |title=A Conversation with Douglas W. Jones and Peter G. Neumann |journal=Queue |date=10 November 2006 |volume=5 |issue=9 |url=http://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=1180188 |access-date=5 October 2012}}</ref> |
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One of [[Lucasarts]]'s most enduring games, "Sam and Max Hit the Road," was referenced in another classic Lucasarts game, [[Dark Forces]]. A hidden cavern at the very beginning of level 8 reveals Max the rabbit's portrait on the overlay map, upon full activation of the LANTFH map-revealing code. (Map attributes for hidden sectors make it possible to explore the cavern fully without the Easter egg showing up unless the code is fully [twice] activated.) |
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[[Netscape Navigator]] contributor [[Jamie Zawinski]] stated in an interview in 1998 that harmless Easter eggs impose a negligible burden on shipped software, and serve the important purpose of helping productivity by keeping programmers happy.<ref>{{cite book |author-last=Spolsky |author-first=Joel |author-link1=Joel Spolsky |title=Joel on Software |date=2004 |publisher=Apress |location=Berkeley, California, USA |isbn=9781590593899 |page=280 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdxrDYZyNLUC&pg=PA280 |access-date=4 November 2017 }}{{Dead link|date=August 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |
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In another Lucasarts game, [[Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy]], if you enable cheats and try to spawn a vehicle, but make it sound like the vehicle's a character, the message "Bad, bad, bad! Tried to spawn NPC vehicle without entering "spawn_npc_vehicle_(vehicle_name)"! Bad, bad, bad! Shame on you!" is shown. |
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==Contemporary works about Easter eggs== |
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Various games feature hidden references to/images of the 'Dopefish', a character from id Software's platformer title ''[[Commander Keen]]''. (See the [[Dopefish]] article for a complete list of games.) |
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<!-- this section is NOT for listing easter eggs. It should be for works where Easter eggs are part of the narrative. All entries must have third-party sourcing --> |
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Easter eggs have become more widely known to the general public and are referenced in contemporary artworks. |
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* In the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' episode "[[Blink (Doctor Who)|Blink]]", the existence of video Easter eggs across seventeen [[DVD]]s leads to solving the protagonists' dilemma.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Wilkins |author-first=Alasdiar |title=Doctor Who: "Blink"/"Utopia" |url=https://www.avclub.com/doctor-who-blink-utopia-1798180187 |website=[[The A.V. Club]] |access-date=5 August 2019 |date=13 April 2014}}</ref> |
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* In [[Ernest Cline]]'s novel ''[[Ready Player One]]'' and its [[Ready Player One (film)|film adaptation]], the protagonists are competing with others to find various Easter eggs within a large [[virtual reality]] environment. The final challenge includes identifying and reaching the Easter egg from the Atari ''Adventure'' game.<ref>{{cite web |author-last=Gach |author-first=Ethan |title=The Real-Life Atari Secret That Inspired Ready Player One |url=https://kotaku.com/the-real-life-atari-secret-that-inspired-ready-player-o-1824221173 |website=[[Kotaku]] |access-date=5 August 2019 |date=30 March 2018}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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==Compact disc and DVD Easter eggs== |
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{{Portal|Video games}} |
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* {{Annotated link|Acrostic}} |
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* [[Hacking of consumer electronics]] |
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* {{Annotated link|Hidden track}} |
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* [[Konami Code]] – a secret code, originally from the game [[Contra (video game)|Contra]], that has gained widespread adoption as an Easter egg |
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* [[List of Easter eggs in Microsoft products]] |
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* [[List of filmmaker's signatures]] |
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* [[List of Google Easter eggs]] |
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* [[List of Easter eggs in Tesla products]] |
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* {{Annotated link|Magic string}} |
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* {{Annotated link|Rickrolling}} |
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* ''[[The Book of Mozilla]]'' |
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* {{Annotated link|Undocumented feature}} |
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* {{sectionlink|Al Hirschfeld|Nina}} |
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==References== |
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[[Image:HipHopYoda.jpg|thumb|300px|"Dancing [[Yoda]]" in an Easter egg from the ''[[Revenge of the Sith]]'' [[DVD]]]] |
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{{Reflist}} |
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[[Image:Bloodygir.png|thumb|right|160px|[[Bloody Gir]], an easter egg on the animated series, ''[[Invader Zim]]''.]] |
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Some [[compact disc]]s include hidden features which may be called Easter eggs, such as screensavers for a [[computer]] which can only be accessed if the CD is played in a [[CD-ROM]] drive, or [[hidden track]]s. An example of the latter is the album ''[[Nevermind]]'' by [[Nirvana (band)|Nirvana]]: at the end of the final track there is a period of silence, after which the unlisted song '[[Endless, Nameless]]" appears. Many other CDs have similar features, some with hidden material appearing on high track numbers (often 69 or 99) and sometimes merely after a long pause in the final track. An exhaustive listing would be nearly impossible. |
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==External links== |
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The practice also occasionally occurred with [[Gramophone record|LP]]s. Possibly the first ever Easter egg on record was the runout groove track on [[The Beatles|The Beatles']] [[1967]] [[Parlophone]] release, ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]].'' After the coda of the final track, "[[A Day in the Life#After the chord|A Day In the Life]]," the album proceeds to a nonsensical edit of Beatles studio chatter, some spliced in reversed, on the innermost groove of the LP. Since most late [[1960s]] record players' auto-return function would lift the tonearm and stylus from the record's "runout" groove before reaching the final concentric groove, listeners missed the recording. The recording was included on the CD releases of the album, looped six or seven times as it would be heard on a turntable without an auto-return feature. Another innovative Easter egg was found on Monty Python's album "Matching Tie and Handkerchief." Advertised as the first 3 sided album, this was achieved by having two separate grooves running the length of the album side, each containing a separate audio program. Which program you got depended upon which groove the needle landed in. |
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* [http://smithsonianchips.si.edu/chipfun/graff.htm "Chip Fun: Microchip-based Easter eggs"] – National Museum of American History. |
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* [http://www.eeggs.com/ The Easter Egg Archive] |
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{{Hidden messages}} |
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A more unusual method of hiding tracks is to insert material ''before'' the first song, only reachable by "rewinding" the CD from its beginning. This achieved by using the "[[pregap]]" space on an audio CD between index 0 and 1. Albums that use this kind of Easter egg include ''[[Factory Showroom]]'' by [[They Might Be Giants]], [[Very Proud of Ya]] by [[AFI]], ''Burn'' by [[Sister Machine Gun]], ''[[Safety In Numbers]]'' by [[Umphrey's McGee]], and many others. Again, a comprehensive list is beyond the scope of the concept's description. |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Easter Egg (Media)}} |
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Even more prevalent are Easter eggs in [[DVD]] releases of movies; these are often in the form of hidden trailers, documentaries, or deleted scenes, and are accessed by manipulation of the disc's interactive menus. An example is the Region 1 [[2000]] DVD release of [[James Cameron]]'s [[1989]] feature film ''[[The Abyss]]'', which has at least nine Easter eggs, including at least three different trailers for ''[[Aliens (1986 movie)|Aliens]]'' and two for ''[[True Lies]]'', two other [[James Cameron]] [[film]]s. More elaborate eggs include that in the [[2002]] release of [[Christopher Nolan]]'s [[2000]] reverse-time thriller ''[[Memento]]'', which plays the scenes of the movie in conventional chronological order. The 2-disc version of [[The Incredibles]] has many easter eggs, most of which can be accessed on different screens by clicking the omnidroid that appears (after a little while) in the upper right hand corner. Roman Polanski's ''[[The Ninth Gate]]'' features several hidden trailers for the film. |
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[[Category:Easter egg (media)| ]] |
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[[Category:Cheating in video games]] |
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The deluxe editions of ''[[The Lord of the Rings film trilogy|The Lord of the Rings]]'' feature the following Easter eggs: |
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[[Category:1980s neologisms]] |
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* [[Jack Black (actor)|Jack Black]]'s parody of the "Council of Elrond" scene |
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[[Category:Computer humour]] |
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* [[Gollum]]'s "award acceptance" speech |
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* A comic interview with [[Elijah Wood]] |
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* A trailer for ''[[The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers]] |
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* A comic interview with director Peter Jackson |
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The two-disc Collector's edition of [[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]] offers 4 Easter Eggs in the second disc. These are small snippets of behind-the-scenes documentaries. |
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The film "[[Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story]]" has an easter egg that includes several "alternate" scenes and an otherwise unavailable director's commentary by Rawson Marshall Thurber, these are all accessed by pressing the enter button on the DVD remote control every time the character "White Goodman" played by [[Ben Stiller]] snaps his fingers. |
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The animated television series "[[Invader Zim]]", pictures of an easter egg named [[GIR (Invader Zim)#Bloody_Gir|Bloody GIR]] are hidden in frames through the last 14 episodes. |
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Even such serious films as ''[[Doctor Zhivago (1965 film)|Doctor Zhivago]]'', ''[[Dances With Wolves]]'' and ''[[Tombstone (film)|Tombstone]]'' can have Easter eggs. |
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The second [[Bionicle]] movie Bionicle 2: Legends of metru nui features a scene where one of the heroes, Matau, flies and smack into a giant banner. If you look closely you can see the 2004 [[LEGO]] logo "Play well" Written in bionicle letters. |
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Most DVD releases of [[George Lucas]]' films include blooper reels or hidden videos that can only be accessed by entering "1138" on the DVD remote when the "[[THX]]" logo has been highlighted. This is an in-joke referring to his first film, ''[[THX 1138]]''. |
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In the movie ''[[Dumb and Dumber]]'', an Easter egg in the form of an actor's commentary on a scene is accessed in the special features menu, and moving the cursor to an invisible icon that looks like an Easter egg when highlighted. |
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On the ''[[Jeopardy!]]'' DVD, viewers will find 2 Easter eggs, each in the form of the show's [[Daily Double]]. One features the intro to the first of the 3 Final games of the ''[[Jeopardy! Ultimate Tournament of Champions]]'', where Alex walks onto stage without his trousers on and hoping that the 3 finalists [[Ken Jennings]], [[Brad Rutter]], and [[Jerome Vered]] have done the same as him; the other features announcer [[Johnny Gilbert]] mistaking [[Alex Trebek]] for contestant coordinator Glenn Kagan in the intro of a Season 16 episode. |
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DVD releases of television series can also feature Easter eggs, particularly ''[[The Simpsons]]''. Moving the cursor to a T-shirt [[Bart Simpson|Bart]] is wearing, for example, gives viewers a news broadcast about the underground manufacture of illegal Simpsons shirts. |
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In order to distinguish between different editions of the same film, some distributors have taken to listing Easter eggs in lists of "extra features" on the packaging and promotional material; some do not consider Easter eggs advertised in this way to be true Easter eggs. |
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==Security concerns== |
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Because of the increase in [[malware]], many companies and government offices forbid the use of software containing Easter eggs for security reasons. With the rise of [[cybercrime]] and the prevalence of the Easter egg's cousin, the [[logic bomb]], there is now concern that if the programmer could slip in undocumented code, then the software cannot be trusted. This is of particular concern in offices where personal or confidential information is stored, making it sensitive to theft and [[ransom]]. For this reason, many developers have stopped the practice of adding Easter eggs to their software. Microsoft, who has in the past created some of the largest and most elaborate Easter eggs such as the ones in [[Microsoft Office]], no longer allows Easter eggs in their software as part of their [[Trustworthy Computing]] initiative.<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://blogs.msdn.com/larryosterman/archive/2005/10/21/483608.aspx |
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|title=Why no Easter Eggs? |
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|author=Larry Osterman |
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|year=[[October 21]] [[2005]] |
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|accessdate=2006-07-29 |
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|work=Larry Osterman's WebLog |
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|publisher=MSDN Blogs |
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}}</ref> |
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==Non-interactive media Easter eggs== |
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* In the write-up of the plagiarism trial of ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'', Judge [[Peter Smith (judge)|Peter Smith]] included a [[Smithy code|coded message]]. |
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* [[BBC MindGames Magazine]] contains a number of hidden [[puzzle]]s and messages in each issue which it refers to as Easter eggs, and which it challenges its readers to find. |
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* In the Dan Brown book [[Digital Fortress]], a numerical message at the back of the book, when decoded, spells out "WE ARE WATCHING YOU". |
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* Early episodes of [[South Park]] show aliens, called visitors, hidden in each episode. |
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==Notes== |
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<references/> |
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==See also== |
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*[[Hidden track]] |
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*[[Undocumented feature]] |
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*[[Easter eggs in Microsoft products]] |
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==External links== |
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*[http://www.eggheaven.com Egg Heaven] – Gives details on virtual Easter eggs in software, games and other popular media products. |
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*[http://www.eeggs.com Easter Egg Archive] – Up-to-date lists and discussions of Easter eggs, both digital and found in art, books, etc. |
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*[http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/sec/0327sec1.html Easter eggs and the Trusted Computing Base] – Network World article outlining the concern over Easter eggs |
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*[http://smithsonianchips.si.edu/chipfun/graff.htm Chip Fun: Microchip-based Easter eggs] – From the National Museum of American History; photos by Integrated Circuit Engineering Corp. |
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*[http://www.dvdeastereggs.com/ DVD Easter Eggs] – Lists many Easter eggs in DVDs |
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*[http://www.dvdreview.com/eastereggs/ List of hidden features on DVDs] – At the "DVD Review" website |
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*[http://www.digitpress.com/eastereggs/ Digital Press' classic video games Easter egg compendium] |
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*[http://www.haloeastereggs.co.nr Halo Easter Eggs]- Listing of the Best Halo Easter Eggs |
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*[http://peeknpoke.gazaxian.com/issue5/PeeknPoke_issue5.pdf Lee's PeeknPoke Issue 5] – PDF retro game magazine with Atari 2600 hidden easter egg feature |
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*[http://www.softwaretipsandtricks.com/eastereggs/ Easter Eggs] – Software Easter Eggs |
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[[Category:Computer humor]] |
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[[Category:In-jokes]] |
[[Category:In-jokes]] |
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[[Category:Software |
[[Category:Software features]] |
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[[cs:Velikonoční vajíčko (virtuální)]] |
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[[es:Huevo de pascua (virtual)]] |
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Latest revision as of 04:35, 24 December 2024
An Easter egg is a message, image, or feature hidden in software, a video game, a film, or another—usually electronic—medium. The term used in this manner was coined around 1979 by Steve Wright, the then-Director of Software Development in the Atari Consumer Division, to describe a hidden message in the Atari video game Adventure, in reference to an Easter egg hunt.
The earliest known video game Easter egg is in the 1973 video game Moonlander, in which the player tries to land a Lunar module on the Moon; if the player opts to fly the module horizontally through several of the game's screens, they encounter a McDonald's restaurant, and if they land next to it, the astronaut will visit it instead of standing next to the ship. The earliest known Easter egg in software in general is one placed in the "make" command for PDP-6/PDP-10 computers sometime in October 1967–October 1968, wherein if the user attempts to create a file named "love" by typing "make love", the program responds "not war?" before proceeding.[2][3]
Origin
[edit]The use of the term "Easter egg" to describe secret features in video games originates from the 1980 video game Adventure for the Atari 2600 game console, programmed by the employee Warren Robinett. At the time, Atari did not include programmers' names in the game credits, both to prevent competitors from poaching its developers as well as to deny developers a means to bargain with the management of the new owners, Warner Communications.[4][5] Robinett, who disagreed with his supervisor over this lack of acknowledgment, secretly programmed the message "Created by Warren Robinett" to appear only if a player moves their avatar over a specific pixel (dubbed the "Gray Dot") during a certain part of the game and enters a previously "forbidden" part of the map where the message can be found. When Robinett left Atari, he did not inform the company of the acknowledgment that he included in the game. Shortly after his departure, the "Gray Dot" and his message were discovered by a player. Atari's management initially wanted to remove the message and release the game again, until this was deemed too costly. Instead, Steve Wright, the Director of Software Development in the Atari Consumer Division, suggested that they keep the message and, in fact, encourage the inclusion of such messages in future games, describing them as Easter eggs for consumers to find.[6][7][8][9][10][11]
In video games
[edit]While Robinett's message in Adventure led to the first use of the phrase "Easter egg", Easter eggs were included in previous video games. The earliest known video game Easter egg is in Moonlander (1973), in which the player tries to land a spaceship on the Moon. If the player flies far enough horizontally, they encounter a McDonald's restaurant, and if they land next to it, an astronaut will visit it instead of standing next to the ship.[12] Other early known Easter eggs include one in the first text adventure game, Colossal Cave Adventure (1976), from which Adventure was fashioned, which includes several secret words. One of these is "xyzzy", a command which enables the player to move between two points in the game world.[13] According to research by Ed Fries, one of the earliest Easter eggs in a graphical video games could be found in Starship 1 (1977), programmed by Ron Milner. By triggering the cabinet's controls in the right order, the player can have the message "Hi Ron!" appear on the screen. Fries describes it as "the earliest arcade game yet known that clearly meets the definition of an Easter egg". The existence of this Easter egg was not published until 2017, leading Fries to suggest that, as more than one hundred arcade games predate Starship 1, earlier Easter eggs may still be undiscovered.[14][15] Fries says that some Atari arcade cabinets were resold under the Kee Games label and include changes to the hardware that make the game appear different from the Atari version. Anti-Aircraft II (1975) includes a means to modify the circuit board to make the airplanes in the game appear as alien UFOs. Fries surmises that this feature may have been intended for a Kee Games release. For this reason, and because it requires a hardware modification, Fries questions whether it meets the definition of an Easter egg.[15] In 2004, an Easter egg displaying programmer Bradley Reid-Selth's surname was found in Video Whizball (1978), a game for the Fairchild Channel F system.[6]
Since Adventure, there has been a long history of video game developers placing Easter eggs in their games.[16]: 19 Most Easter eggs are intentional—an attempt to communicate with the player or a way of getting even with management for a perceived slight. Easter eggs in video games take a variety of forms, from purely ornamental screens to aesthetic enhancements that change some element of the game during play. The Easter egg included in the original Age of Empires (1997) is an example of the latter; catapult projectiles are changed from stones to cows.[16]: 19
More elaborate Easter eggs include secret levels and developers' rooms—fully functional, hidden areas of the game. Developers' rooms often include inside jokes from the fandom or development team and differ from a debug room in that they are specifically intended for the player to find. Some games even include hidden minigames as Easter eggs. In the LucasArts game Day of the Tentacle (1993), the original Maniac Mansion (1987) game can be played in its full version by using a home computer in a character's room.[17][18] Similarly, a programmer included the whole of TimeSplitters 2 (2002) within Homefront: The Revolution (2016), accessed by using a special code at an in-game arcade cabinet.[19]
Other Easter eggs originated unintentionally. The Konami Code, a type of cheat code, became an intentional Easter egg in most games, but it originated from Konami's Gradius (1985) for the Nintendo Entertainment System. The programmer, Kazuhisa Hashimoto, created the code as a means to rapidly debug the game by giving the player's avatar additional health and powers to easily traverse the game. These types of codes are normally removed from the game before it is shipped but, in the case of Gradius, Hashimoto forgot to remove it and the code was soon discovered by players. Its popularity inspired Konami to reuse the code and purposely retain it for many of its future games as an Easter egg.[6][17][20]
Technical issues may also create unintentional Easter eggs. Jon Burton, founder of Traveller's Tales, said that many seemingly apparent Easter eggs in their Sega Genesis games came about as a result of introducing programming tricks to get around some of the difficulty they had in getting Sega's strict certification for their games, catching any exceptions during execution to bring the game back to a usable state as to pass certification. For example, hitting the side of the Sonic 3D Blast (1996) cartridge while it is slotted in the console will bring the game back to the Level Select screen, which Burton explains is the default exception handling for any unidentified processor error, such as when connectivity between the cartridge and the console's microprocessor is temporarily lost.[21]
In computing
[edit]Software
[edit]In computer software, Easter eggs are secret responses that occur as a result of an undocumented set of commands. The results can vary from a simple printed message or image to a page of programmer credits or a small video game hidden inside an otherwise serious piece of software.
In the TOPS-10 operating system (for the DEC PDP-10 mainframe computer), the make
command is used to invoke the TECO editor to create a file. If given the file name argument love
, so that the command reads make love
, it will pause and respond not war?
before creating the file.[2] The Easter egg was added sometime between October 1967 and October 1968 by William F. Weiher at the Stanford AI Lab to the COMPIL program for the PDP-6, which was then used in the TOPS-10 operating system, making it the first Easter egg in a software program.[3] This same behavior occurs on the RSTS/E operating system, where TECO will provide this response.[citation needed] Other Unix operating systems respond to "why
" with "why not
" (a reference to The Prisoner in Berkeley Unix, 1977).[citation needed]
Some versions of the DEC OpenVMS operating system have concealed exit status codes, including a reference to the Monty Python Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook skit; "exit %xb70
" returns the message "%SYSTEM-W-FISH, my hovercraft is full of eels" while "exit %x34b4
" returns a reference to an early Internet meme: "%SYSTEM-F-GAMEOVER, All your base are belong to us".[22]
Easter eggs in the 1997 version of Microsoft Office include a hidden flight simulator in Microsoft Excel and a pinball game in Microsoft Word.[23][24] Since 2002, Microsoft does not allow any hidden or undocumented code as part of its trustworthy computing initiative.[25]
The Debian operating system's package tool apt-get has an Easter egg involving an ASCII cow when variants on apt-get moo
are typed into the shell.[26][27][28]
An Easter egg is found on all Microsoft Windows operating systems before XP. In the 3D Text screen saver, entering the text "volcano" will display the names of all the volcanoes in the United States. Microsoft removed this Easter egg in XP but added others.[29] In Windows Vista and later, by launching a screensaver executable (introduced with Windows Vista) on the command line with the /p65552
flag, for example launching the "bubbles" screen saver with bubbles.scr /p65552
command-line parameter, it runs as desktop wallpaper.[30] Microsoft Excel 95 contains a hidden action game similar to Doom (1993) called The Hall of Tortured Souls.[31]
The Google search engine famously contains many Easter eggs, given to the user in response to certain search queries.[32]
Steve Jobs banned Easter eggs from Apple products upon his return to the company.[33] The first Easter egg to appear after his death is in a 2012 update to the Mac App Store for OS X Mountain Lion, in which downloaded apps are temporarily timestamped as "24 January 1984", the date of the sales launch of the original Macintosh.[33]
The Python programming language and its ecosystem of libraries include various Easter eggs.[34]
Firmware
[edit]While computer-related Easter eggs are often found in installed software, occasionally they exist in the firmware of certain devices. On some home and early personal computers the ROM contains Easter eggs, including lists of the developers' names, political exhortations, snatches of music, or images of the entire development team.
The palmtop PC HP 200LX (1994) includes an undocumented hex calculator HEXCALC.EXM. The built-in maze game "Lair of Squid" incorporates a hidden gallery of the software developers. In test mode it displays several poems.
Other notable examples include some versions of the AMI BIOS that on 13 November 1993, proceeded to play "Happy Birthday" via the PC speaker repeatedly instead of booting,[35] as well as several early Apple Macintosh models that have photos of the development team in the ROM. These Mac Easter eggs were well-publicized in the Macintosh press at the time[36] along with the means to access them, and were later recovered by an NYC Resistor team, a hacker collective, through elaborate reverse engineering.[37][38] Similarly, the Radio Shack Color Computer 3's ROM contains code which displays what looks like three Microware developers on a Ctrl+Alt+Reset keypress sequence—a hard reset which discards any information currently in RAM.[39]
Several oscilloscopes contain Easter eggs. One example is the HP 54600B[when?], known to have a Tetris (1985) clone,[40] and the HP 54622D[when?] contains an imitation of the Asteroids (1979) game named Rocks.[41] Another is the Tektronix 1755A[when?] Vector and Waveform Monitor which displays swimming fish when Remote > Software version is selected on the CONFIG menu.[42]
In the second and third hardware revision of the Minolta Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9 (introduced in 1998) SLR camera, including all SSM/ADI upgraded bodies (since 2003), an undocumented button sequence can be utilized to reconfigure the camera to behave like the Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9Ti (1999) and subsequently invoke support for the limited model's extra functions also in the black model.[43][44][45][46]
One of HP's electronic pocket calculators, the HP-45 (introduced in 1973), has a built-in undocumented stopwatch.[47]
The firmware of HP's ScanJet 5p image scanner contains an easter egg wherein, on a cold power-on, holding down the scan button when the SCSI ID selector on the back is set to "0" will cause the ScanJet to play a rendition of Schiller's "Ode to Joy", by modulating the speed of the audible stepper motor drive to produce specific pitches.[48][49]
Hardware
[edit]The Commodore Amiga 1000 computer includes the signatures of the design and development team embossed on the inside of the case, including Jay Miner and the paw print of his dog, Mitchy.[50] The Commodore Amiga models 500, 600, and 1200 each feature Easter eggs in the form of song titles by the B-52's as white printing on the motherboards. The 500 says "B52/Rock Lobster", the 600 says "June Bug", and the 1200 says "Channel Z".[51] The Amiga OS software contains hidden messages.[52][53]
Many integrated circuit (chip) designers have included hidden graphics elements termed chip art, including images, phrases, developer initials, logos, and more. This artwork, like the rest of the chip, is reproduced in each copy by lithography and etching. These are visible only when the chip package is opened and examined under magnification.[54] The 1984 CVAX microchip implementation of the MicroVAX CPU contains in its etchings the Russian phrase in the Cyrillic alphabet "VAX: When you care enough to steal the very best",[55] placed there because, "knowing that some CVAXs would end up in the USSR, the team wanted the Russians to know that we were thinking of them".[54]
Another notable example is the pro controller for the Nintendo Switch, on the controller's motherboard, if a player holds down on the right stick and looks closely into the transparent plastic surrounding its socket while shining a light on it, there is a hidden message that reads "THX2ALLGAMEFANS!". The message was discovered by Japanese Twitter user Geo Stream on March 4, 2017, one day after the Switch's launch.
Comics
[edit]American comic book artists are known to include hidden messages in their art:[56]
- In a reprint of classic Captain America comics, a production artist drew a penis on Bucky Barnes.[57]
- In 2000, Al Milgrom inserted a message into Universe X: Spidey #1 insulting his previous boss, Marvel Editor in Chief Bob Harras, following Harras' termination from Marvel Comics. On Page 28, panel 3, the spines of books on a bookshelf in the background read, "HARRAS HA HA, HE'S GONE, GOOD RIDDANCE TO BAD RUBBISH HE WAS A NASTY S.O.B." The message was spotted after the book was printed but before it went on sale; the copies that were printed for consumers were destroyed. However, 4,000 preview copies were distributed to retailers as part of a "First Look" deal, and these are today considered rare collectors' items. Milgrom was "apparently fired and allegedly (and quietly) re-hired several weeks later".[57][58][59]
- Ethan Van Sciver hid the word "sex" in the background of nearly every page of New X-Men #118 (November 2001).[57][60] Van Sciver subsequently stated that he hid the word throughout the book because he was annoyed with Marvel at the time for reasons he cannot remember, and thought it would be fun to engage in some mischief with his work.[citation needed]
- Indonesian artist Ardian Syaf is known to engage in the practice of hiding Easter egg references to political figures in the backgrounds of his artwork. In Batgirl (vol. 4) #9 (July 2012), Syaf included a storefront sign that referenced the President of Indonesia, Joko Widodo, although the text that accompanies the image of Widodo is covered by a caption.[57][61] In April 2017, he caused an outcry by placing Easter egg references to the November 2016 Jakarta protests into the pages of X-Men Gold #1, which were perceived by readers to be anti-Semitic and anti-Christian. Though Syaf acknowledged the political nature of the messages,[57][62] he stated that they were not intended to express any anti-Semitic nor anti-Christian sentiment on his part.[63] In response to these Easter eggs, Marvel terminated their contract with Syaf.[64]
Video
[edit]Home media
[edit]Easter eggs are found on films, DVDs, and Blu-ray Discs, often as deleted scenes or bonus features.[65][66][67] Klinger states that their presence is "another signifier of artistry in the world of DVD supplements."[66] According to American film critics James Berardinelli and Roger Ebert, most DVDs do not contain them and most examples are "inconsequential", but a few, such as the one found on the Memento DVD release, are "worth the effort to seek out".[67]
Broadcast media
[edit]Unlike DVDs and computer games, broadcast radio and television programs contain no executable code. Easter eggs may still appear in the content itself, such as a hidden Mickey in a Disney film or a real telephone number instead of a 555 fictitious telephone number.[original research?] A 2014 Super Bowl advertisement was leaked online in which a lady gives a man a real telephone number, which the advertiser had hidden as a marketing ploy; the first caller to the number received a pair of tickets to the game.[68] The 1980s animated series She-Ra: Princess of Power featured a character named Loo-Kee who typically appeared once per episode, hidden in a single screenshot. At the end of the episode, the screenshot would be shown again and Loo-Kee would challenge viewers to locate him before revealing his hiding place.[69][70] Adventure Time also had a character known as The Snail that was hidden in almost every episode of the show.[71]
More recent broadcast media, where viewers have access to high-resolution digital copies or streaming services, may include further Easter eggs that can only be found by freezing the show at certain points. In the anthology series Black Mirror, the producers have included Easter eggs that reference past episodes, or tie into future episodes, as a means of loosely tying together all episodes into a single Black Mirror universe.[72] The Netflix series Stranger Things had a real-world Easter Egg where a pizza delivery van featured in the show's fourth season had the phone number (805) 45-PIZZA shown on its side. If that number, which translated to 805-457-4992 was dialed, it led to a special message from Argyle, the fictional restaurant's delivery driver.[73]
Security concerns
[edit]Security author Michel E. Kabay discussed security concerns of Easter eggs in 2000, saying that, while software quality assurance requires that all code be tested, it is not known whether Easter eggs are. He said that, as they tend to be held as programming secrets from the rest of the product testing process, a "logic bomb" could also bypass testing. Kabay asserts that this undermined the Trusted Computing Base, a paradigm of trustworthy hardware and software in place since the 1980s, and is of concern wherever personal or confidential information is stored, as this may then be vulnerable to damage or manipulation.[74] Microsoft created some of the largest and most elaborate Easter eggs, such as those in Microsoft Office.[75] In 2005, Larry Osterman of Microsoft acknowledged Microsoft Easter eggs, and his involvement in development of one, but described them as "irresponsible", and wrote that the company's Operating System division "has a 'no Easter Eggs' policy" as part of its Trustworthy Computing initiative.[25]
In 2006, Douglas W. Jones said that while "some Easter eggs may be intentional tools used to detect illegal copying, others are clearly examples of unauthorized functionality that has slipped through the quality-control tests at the vendor". While hidden Easter eggs themselves are harmless, it may be possible for malware to be hidden in similar ways in voting machines or other computers.[76]
Netscape Navigator contributor Jamie Zawinski stated in an interview in 1998 that harmless Easter eggs impose a negligible burden on shipped software, and serve the important purpose of helping productivity by keeping programmers happy.[77]
Contemporary works about Easter eggs
[edit]Easter eggs have become more widely known to the general public and are referenced in contemporary artworks.
- In the Doctor Who episode "Blink", the existence of video Easter eggs across seventeen DVDs leads to solving the protagonists' dilemma.[78]
- In Ernest Cline's novel Ready Player One and its film adaptation, the protagonists are competing with others to find various Easter eggs within a large virtual reality environment. The final challenge includes identifying and reaching the Easter egg from the Atari Adventure game.[79]
See also
[edit]- Acrostic – Text formed from parts of another text
- Hacking of consumer electronics
- Hidden track – Music not detectable by casual listeners
- Konami Code – a secret code, originally from the game Contra, that has gained widespread adoption as an Easter egg
- List of Easter eggs in Microsoft products
- List of filmmaker's signatures
- List of Google Easter eggs
- List of Easter eggs in Tesla products
- Magic string – Input which activates otherwise hidden functionality
- Rickrolling – Internet prank and meme
- The Book of Mozilla
- Undocumented feature – Aspect of computer hardware or software
- Al Hirschfeld § Nina
References
[edit]- ^ "Zwei Kaninchen und ein Igel" ("Two rabbits and a hedgehog") by Carl Oswald Rostosky.
- ^ a b Montfort, Nick; Bogost, Ian (2009). Racing the Beam: The Atari Video Computer System. Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: MIT Press. p. 59. ISBN 9780262012577. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
- ^ a b Willaert, Kate (23 May 2021). "Make Love Not War: Talking With The Creator Of The First Software Easter Egg". A Critical Hit!. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
- ^ Yarwood, Jack (27 March 2016). "Easter Eggs: The Hidden Secrets of Videogames". Paste. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
- ^ Fatsquatch (20 May 2003). "Of Dragons and Easter Eggs: A Chat With Warren Robinett". The Jaded Gamer. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
- ^ a b c Wolf, Mark J. P. (2012). Encyclopedia of Video Games: The Culture, Technology, and Art of Gaming. Santa Barbara, California, USA: Greenwood. p. 177. ISBN 9780313379369.
- ^ "Play Atari Adventure". IGN. Archived from the original on 13 April 2018. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Baker, Chris (13 March 2015). "How One Man Invented the Console Adventure Game". WIRED. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
- ^ Salen, Katie; Zimmerman, Eric (2005). The Game Design Reader: A Rules of Play Anthology. Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: MIT Press. pp. 690–713. ISBN 0262195364. OCLC 58919795.
- ^ "Letter to Atari" (PDF). 2600 Connections. 4 August 1980. Archived from the original on 13 October 2016. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Pogue, David (8 August 2019). "The Secret History of 'Easter Eggs'". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^ Willaert, Kate (4 April 2021). "Ready Player One Was Wrong: The First Easter Eggs In Video Games". A Critical Hit!. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
- ^ Jerz, Dennis G. (2007). "Somewhere Nearby is Colossal Cave: Examining Will Crowther's Original "Adventure" in Code and in Kentucky". Digital Humanities Quarterly. 1 (2). The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Machkovech, Sam (22 March 2017). "The arcade world's first Easter egg discovered after fraught journey". Ars Technica. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
- ^ a b Fries, Ed (24 March 2017). "The Hunt For The First Arcade Game Easter Egg". Kotaku. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
- ^ a b Consalvo, Mia (2007). Cheating: Gaining Advantage in Videogames. Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: MIT Press. ISBN 9780262033657.
- ^ a b Björk, Staffan; Holopainen, Jussi (2005). Patterns In Game Design (1st ed.). Hingham, Massachusetts, USA: Charles River Media. p. 235. ISBN 9781584503545. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
- ^ "Optical Information Systems Update/library & Information Center Applications". CD-ROM World. 9 (1–5). Meckler Publishing. February 1994. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
The best Easter egg of all is the entire Maniac Mansion game, which appears on a computer in Doctor Fred's mansion. Users can play the original game in its entirety.
- ^ Stanton, Rich (9 April 2021). "Cheat code to play 4K Timesplitters 2 in Homefront: The Revolution revealed after 5 years". PC Gamer. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
- ^ Garmon, Jay (5 March 2007). "Geek Trivia: The cheat goes on". TechRepublic. Retrieved 16 April 2008.
- ^ Orland, Kyle (4 October 2017). "How hitting a game cartridge unlocks gaming's weirdest Easter egg". Ars Technica. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
- ^ "OpenVMS Undocumented Features". PARSEC Group. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
- ^ Anonymous (19 July 1999). "Excel Easter Egg - Excel 97 Flight to Credits". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved 4 January 2011.
- ^ Arima, Kevin (20 July 2009). "Word (Microsoft) Easter Egg - Pinball in Word 97". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved 4 January 2011.
- ^ a b Osterman, Larry (21 October 2005). "Why no Easter Eggs?". Larry Osterman's WebLog. Microsoft Docs. Archived from the original on 31 March 2021. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
- ^ Grant, Rickford with; Bull, Phil (2010). Ubuntu for Non-Geeks: A Pain-Free, Get-Things-Done Guide (4th ed.). San Francisco, California, USA: No Starch Press. p. 168. ISBN 9781593272579. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
- ^ "apt-private/private-moo.cc". main - APT Developers / apt - GitLab. 12 July 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
- ^ "cmdline/apt-get.cc". main - APT Developers / apt - GitLab. 28 October 2022. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
- ^ Hoye, David (13 March 2003). "'Easter egg' hunts can turn up surprises". Newsbank. The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved 4 November 2017.(subscription required)
- ^ "How to run Screensaver as Wallpaper in Windows 11/10". The Windows Club. 18 March 2019. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
- ^ Gaskell, John (19 July 1999). "Excel Easter Egg - Excel 95 Hall of Tortured Souls". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved 30 April 2009.
- ^ Sherman, Chris (9 October 2018). "Updated: The big list of Google Easter eggs". Search Engine Land. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- ^ a b Diaz, Jesus (26 July 2012). "The Easter Eggs Are Back in OS X—And This One Is Insanely Great". Gizmodo. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ "OrkoHunter/python-easter-eggs: Curated list of all the easter eggs and hidden jokes in Python". GitHub. 9 August 2019. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
- ^ "Happy Birthday Description". F-Secure Labs. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
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- ^ "The World of 68' Micros". 5 (6). FARNA Systems. May 1998: 5. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ kcbhiw (24 July 2001). "HP 54600B Oscilloscope Easter Egg - Tetris Within Oscilloscope". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ TonyK (24 April 2002). "HP 54622D Easter Egg - HP Asteroids". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved 11 March 2015.
- ^ Pavel (8 April 2000). "Tektronix 1751 Digital Video Osciloscope / Vectorscope Easter Egg - Fishes Swimming on Screen". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Paul, Matthias R. (24 December 2010). "Zusätzliche Funktionen für die Minolta Dynax 9 - Kleine Bescherung: Und es geht doch - 9Ti-Funktionen für Dynax 9" [Extra functions for the Dynax 9 - a little Christmas present: Against all odds, it works: 9Ti functions on the Dynax 9]. Mi-Fo (in German). Archived from the original on 23 July 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2014. (NB. Description of an undocumented activation procedure to enable the extra functions of the Minolta Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9Ti limited edition model on all standard black Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9 bodies equipped with second and third PCB revision, including all bodies with SSM/ADI upgrade.)
- ^ "Belated Christmas gift for Dynax/Maxxum/Alpha 9". Dyxum. 28 December 2010. Archived from the original on 18 May 2022. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
- ^ "Upgrade des fonctionnalités du D9 en D9Ti gratuite" [Upgrade of the functions of the D9 and D9Ti free]. AlphaDxD (in French). 5 January 2011. Archived from the original on 18 May 2022. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
- ^ Paul, Matthias R. (25 June 2006). "Maxxum 9 Update?". Shutterbug. Archived from the original on 27 October 2006.
[…] the SSM/ADI upgrade does not incorporate upgrading a black body to 9Ti specs, functions-wise. That is, the extra custom functions (except for 20-4) still do not normally exist on black bodies after the upgrade. Of course, 9Ti bodies do not lose their extra functions during the upgrade. […] Die-hard Minolta fans of the "black beauty" may feel free to contact […] if their camera body is either SSM/ADI upgraded already or shows the above mentioned improved behaviour. I may have some extra sweets for you... […]
(NB. Not related to the undocumented button sequence revealed in the 2010 post but giving general background on the subtle differences of the camera variants and already hinting on a more elaborate internal configuration file manipulation hack to switch camera profiles.) - ^ Miller, Paul E. (June 1976). "How To Use The HP-45 Calculator As a Stopwatch Or Elapsed-time Indicator". Popular Electronics.
- ^ Bombay, Emilio (29 October 1998). "Have your eyes checked, too". Fort Worth Star-Telegram: 3 – via ProQuest.
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- ^ Corrigan, Patricia (2007). Bringing Science to Life: A Guide from the Saint Louis Science. St. Louis, Missouri, USA: Reedy Press. p. 69. ISBN 9781933370163.
- ^ Compute!. 12 (6–9). Small System Service. 1990.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) - ^ Petersen, Julie K. (2002). The Telecommunications Illustrated Dictionary (2nd ed.). Boca Raton, Florida, USA: CRC Press. p. 293. ISBN 9780849311734. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
- ^ Hyman, Michael (1995). PC Roadkill. Foster City, California, USA: Programmers Press. p. c. ISBN 9781568843483. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
- ^ a b Supnik, Bob (24 February 2008). "CVAX". Computer Simulation and History. Archived from the original on 17 January 2015. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
- ^ "Steal The Best". Molecular Expressions: The Silicon Zoo. 7 July 1999. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ Cronin, Brian (1 July 2011). "Comic Book Easter Eggs Archive!". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ a b c d e Johnston, Rich (8 April 2017). "Marvel Artist Ardian Syaf Hid Antisemitic And Anti-Christian Messages In This Week's X-Men Comic". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
And there was the time a production artist drew a penis on Bucky in classic Captain America archive reprints.
- ^ McCallum, Diana (4 February 2011). "6 Comic Book Easter Eggs That Stuck It to The Man". Cracked.com. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ "Universe X Spidey 1 Harras Slander Variant". Recalled Comics. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
- ^ Cronin, Brian (19 July 2011). "Comic Book Easter Eggs - New "Se"X-Men #118 Edition!". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Gail Simone (w), Ardian Syaf (p), Vicente Cifuentes (i). "In the Line of Fire" Batgirl, vol. 4, no. 9 (July 2012). DC Comics.
- ^ Lovett, Jamie (8 April 2017). "Marvel Releases Statement On Controversial X-Men Gold Art". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ "Buni Yani Questioned Again in Cyber Harassment Case". Jakarta Globe. January 2017. Archived from the original on 21 February 2017. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Brown, Tracy (11 April 2017). "Today in Entertainment: Inside Disney's Pandora; Fyre Fest's apology; and 'Hamilton' ticket details". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Saltzman, Marc (2002). DVD Confidential: Hundreds of Hidden Easter Eggs Revealed. McGraw-Hill Osborne Media. ISBN 9780072226638.
- ^ a b Bennett, James; Brown, Tom (2008). "The DVD Cinephile: Viewing Heritages and Home Film Cultures". Film and television after DVD. New York, USA: Routledge. p. 23. ISBN 9780415962414. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
- ^ a b Berardinelli, James; Ebert, Roger (2005). "Appendix: Easter Eggs, Extended Editions, and Director's Cuts". Reel Views 2: The Ultimate Guide to the Best 1,000 Modern Movies on DVD and Video, Volume 2 (1st U.S ed.). Boston, USA: Justin, Charles & Co. p. 577. ISBN 9781932112405. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
- ^ Merda, Chad (30 January 2014). "Easter egg in Old Spice Super Bowl ad yields two tickets to curious fan". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 11 March 2015.
- ^ Bricken, Rob (25 May 2015). "Every She-Ra: Princess Of Power Figure, Ranked". io9. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ DePiano, Hillary (2006). The She-Ra Collector's Inventory: an Unofficial Illustrated Guide to All Princess of Power Toys and Accessories. Priced Nostalgia Press. p. 33. ISBN 9781411631281. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ D'Onofrio, Matthew (14 May 2021). "10 Things Only Die-Hard Fans Of The Series Will Notice In Adventure Time: Distant Lands". Game Rant. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
- ^ Strause, Jackie (7 September 2017). "'Black Mirror' Bosses on "San Junipero" Sequel and an Unpredictable Season 4". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 15 December 2017. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
- ^ Goslin, Austen (8 July 2022). "Stranger Things' Surfer Boy Pizza number really lets you call Argyle". Polygon. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
- ^ Kabay, M. E. (27 March 2000). "Easter eggs and the Trusted Computing Base". Network World. Archived from the original on 15 June 2006. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Schultz, Greg (29 August 2010). "Take a look back at Microsoft Word Easter Eggs". ZDNet. Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2012.
Microsoft's developers hid multiple Easter Eggs in Word 95/97/2000.
- ^ Neuman, Peter G. (10 November 2006). "A Conversation with Douglas W. Jones and Peter G. Neumann". Queue. 5 (9). Retrieved 5 October 2012.
- ^ Spolsky, Joel (2004). Joel on Software. Berkeley, California, USA: Apress. p. 280. ISBN 9781590593899. Retrieved 4 November 2017.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Wilkins, Alasdiar (13 April 2014). "Doctor Who: "Blink"/"Utopia"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
- ^ Gach, Ethan (30 March 2018). "The Real-Life Atari Secret That Inspired Ready Player One". Kotaku. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
External links
[edit]- "Chip Fun: Microchip-based Easter eggs" – National Museum of American History.
- The Easter Egg Archive