Egg easter windows 7




















Shaun N. I dont think thats an easter egg. Geoffrey B. Veteran Posted December 8, I don't think these are classed as Easter eggs. Nick Brunt Posted December 8, Elliott Posted December 8, Wow, those are boring "easter eggs. Thats one of the major innovations of Windows 7! It's even been featured in TV ads!

Lee G. Use the Problem Steps Recorder. The Problem Steps Recorder will record your computer activities through a series screenshots. The program also automatically adds captions to the screenshots to show exactly where you clicked. You can also add custom comments by clicking the Add Comment button. When you have finished recording, the program will automatically join all of the images together and save the file, conveniently zipped as an MTHML file.

Click Start Record and viola! I recently found a cool way to diagnose the battery issue and it works like a charm. Use Google Fonts in Word. Customize the Taskbar in Windows What Is svchost. Best Home Theater Systems. Best Smartwatches. Best Gaming Laptops. Best Smart Displays. Best Home Security Systems. Best External Solid State Drives. Best Portable Chargers. Best Phone Chargers. Best Wi-Fi Range Extenders.

Best Oculus Quest 2 Accessories. Awesome PC Accessories. It's nothing more than a dummy or placeholder. And depending on the numbers you pick, you can make it appear in many more paragraphs and copies. The text will vary, depending on your version of Office and your primary system language.

In Microsoft Word 97 through with English as the primary language, you'll see the iconic sentence "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," which contains all letters of the alphabet. Since Office , the default text has been taken from a Word tutorial and also changed from Word to Word Microsoft has fixed a few of the weird bugs we've covered in the past.

Here are two that didn't survive in subsequent Windows versions. If you did this in Windows XP, you'd see some weird Unicode characters or Chinese characters like in the screenshot above. The explanation for this bug lies in the Windows function "IsTextUnicode". The sequence of one four-letter, two three-letter, and finally one five letter word creates a so-called mojibake; Windows thinks it's dealing with Chinese Unicode and when you save the document encodes it as such.

When you re-open the document, it then displays Chinese characters, rather than the sentence you had entered. What happens is that the game ends right there and you see the cards falling to the front as they do when a game is completed successfully. Windows still has a lot of secrets hidden within it, even after all these years.

The next time you have to fix the family PC, why not show off one of these tricks yourself? Ever wonder what happens when you delete a file or what accounts run before you log in? We reveal the secrets behind these and other Windows mysteries.



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