| This article or section is missing citations or needs footnotes. Using inline citations helps guard against copyright violations and factual inaccuracies. (February 2008) |
| Hidden messages |
|---|
| Audio |
| Numeric |
| Visual |
| See also: |
A virtual Easter egg is an intentional hidden message or feature in an object such as a movie, book, CD, DVD, computer program, web page or video game. The term draws a parallel with the custom of the Easter egg hunt observed in many Western nations, but actually is derived by the practice of the last Russian imperial family's tradition of giving elaborately jeweled egg-shaped creations by Fabergé which usually contained hidden gifts themselves.1
This practice is similar in some respects to hidden signature motifs such as Diego Rivera including himself in his murals, Alfred Hitchcock's legendary cameo appearances, and various "Hidden Mickeys" that can be found throughout Disneyland. An early example of these kind of "Easter eggs" is Al Hirschfeld's "Nina."
Atari's Adventure, released in 1979, contained what was thought to be the first video game "Easter egg", the name of the programmer (Warren Robinett). However, evidence of earlier Easter eggs has since surfaced. Several cartridges for the Fairchild Channel F include previously unknown Easter eggs, programmed by Michael Glass and Brad Reid-Selth, that are believed to predate Robinett's work.23 The 1978 Atari arcade games Orbit and Skydiver also include Easter eggs, programmed by Owen Rubin, though unlike Glass and Reid-Selth's eggs, the method of triggering these has yet to be discovered. Despite this evidence of prior art, Robinett's egg was certainly the first of its kind to be discovered and, consequently, the first Easter egg to come to widespread attention.
Contents |
Computer-related Easter eggs
Software-based
Easter eggs are messages, videos, graphics, sound effects, or an unusual change in program behavior that sometimes 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. They are often located in the "About" box of a software. For example, two easter eggs exist in the "About" box of Adobe Photoshop 7: an alternative "Liquid Sky" splash screen and the ability to speed up credits to view funny quotations. 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.
Easter eggs found in some Unix operating systems caused them to respond to the command "make love" with "not war?" and "why" with "why not" (a reference to The Prisoner in Berkeley Unix 1977). 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 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: Lost Caverns, which contains an entire game that was more complex and challenging than the original Pitfall II. Many personal computers have much more elaborate eggs hidden in ROM, including lists of the developers' names, political exhortations, snatches of music, and (in one case) images of the entire development team. Easter eggs in the 1997 version of Microsoft Office include a hidden flight simulator45 in Microsoft Excel and a pinball game6 in Word (see Easter eggs in Microsoft products). The 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. Many new video games contain easter eggs, like Microsoft's very popular Halo series.
An Easter Egg is found on all Microsoft Windows Operating Systems prior to XP. In the 3D Text screen saver, entering the text "volcano" will display the names of all the known volcanoes that exist in the world. Microsoft removed this Easter Egg in XP but added others. One which continues till Windows XP is to simultaneously hold the Alt, shift, and the number 2 keys in the Solitaire game to produce a forced win.7
A number of early Microsoft programs had hidden animated stuffed animal characters which could be revealed by following a complicated sequence of inputs. An early version of Microsoft Excel contained a hidden Doom-like action game called "The Hall of Tortured Souls". Windows 3.1 has a hidden developer credits page, which can be accessed by following a sequence of right-clicking and entering code words which is passed around by word-of-mouth.
The tradition of easter eggs remains strong, including in more recent system software. For example, every version of HP Integrity Virtual Machines added new easter eggs, including the ability to translate the output of guest operating systems in "Gnomish", a "legacy mode" paying tribute to discontinued HP products, or a hidden hpvmtunes command that is supposed to be similar to iTunes. These easter eggs were never removed, because they all have been engineered to have an actual purpose. The legacy mode, for example, can be used to intercept system errors, and the hpvmtunes command can be used to collect and analyze performance data.
Non-software
While computer-related Easter eggs are often found in software, occasionally they exist in hardware or firmware of certain devices. On some PCs, the BIOS 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. Similarly, the Radio Shack Color Computer 3's ROM contained code which would display the likenesses of three Microware developers on a <ctrl><alt><reset> keypress sequence - a hard reset which would discard any information currently in the dynamic memory.8
Perhaps the most famous example of a hardware Easter egg is in the 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. This is achieved through software intervention. Another Easter egg is found in the Kurzweil K2x musical keyboard series (K2500, 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 have Asteroids clone (and even saves high scores in NV-RAM).
Chip and PCB-based Easter eggs
Many integrated circuit (chip) designers have included 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 "inside joke" than most of the Easter eggs included in software.
Originally, the Easter eggs served a useful purpose as well. Not unlike cartographers who may insert trap streets 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 works, and the Easter egg no longer serves any practical use.
Western Digital's MyBook Pro has several words on the metal band that wraps around 3 sides in Morse Code.9 The code reads:
PERSONALRELIABLEINNOVATIVESIMPLE INNOVATIVEPERSONALDESIGNRELIABLE INNOVATIVEDESIGNPERSONALDESIGN SIMPLEINNOVATIVE
Most Bungie product boxes have anagrams on the bottom.
The 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 motherboards. The 500 says "Rock Lobster", the 600 says "June Bug", and the 1200 says "Channel Z". The Amiga OS software includes a variety of hidden messages as well.10
Several models of S3 Trio 64v+ graphics cards have lyrics of songs by The Beatles printed faintly along the edge of the card.
The circuit board under the bottom most plate of HP LaserJet 1100 printer has the following text printed on it: "This Product is Dedicated in Memory of our Good Friend Ming-Zen Kuo".
Easter eggs on DVDs
Easter eggs are also found on movie DVDs. In some cases, an extra click to the right or left, or going up in the menu instead of going down to select a choice will bring up a hidden feature, including concept art, humorous outtakes, or deleted scenes.11
Security concerns
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.12
In fiction
A DVD easter egg is a plot point in "Blink", a 2007 episode of the science fiction series Doctor Who. Appropriately enough, the actual video footage used for the easter egg is included as an easter egg with the episode on its DVD box set release.13
See also
Notes
- ^ Hidden DVD Easter Eggs
- ^ The Very First Easter Egg (Was Not Adventure)
- ^ Channel F
- ^ "Excel 97 Flight to Credits". The Easter Egg Archive.
- ^ "Excel 97 Flight Simulator – For later versions of Microsoft Excel". The Easter Egg Archive.
- ^ "Pinball in Word 97". The Easter Egg Archive.
- ^ David Hoye (March 13, 2003), "'Easter egg' hunts can turn up surprises" (subscription required). The Sacramento Bee.
- ^ TRS-80 CoCo Wiki on the "3 Mugateers" ROM bitmap.
- ^ Morse Code explanation on official Western Digital My Book Webpage.
- ^ AmigaOS Easter Eggs from the Amiga History Guide
- ^ ""DVD Easter Eggs - Hidden Features on DVDs"". DVD Easter Eggs. Retrieved on March 22, 2008.
- ^ Larry Osterman (October 21, 2005). "Why no Easter Eggs?". Larry Osterman's WebLog. MSDN Blogs. Retrieved on 2006-07-29.
- ^ ""Doctor Who Series 3 Boxset Blink Easter Egg « Freema Agyeman Forums"". Retrieved on March 22, 2008.
External links
- Easter eggs and the Trusted Computing Base – Network World article outlining the concern over Easter eggs
- Chip Fun: Microchip-based Easter eggs – From the National Museum of American History; photos by Integrated Circuit Engineering Corp.
- Lee's PeeknPoke Issue 5 – PDF retro game magazine with Atari 2600 hidden Easter egg feature
- Software Tips and Tricks – Details on Easter eggs found in operating systems and applications.
- Egg Heaven – Gives details on virtual Easter eggs in software, games and other popular media products.
- Hidden DVD Easter Eggs – Comprehensive lising of Easter eggs on domestic and foreign DVDs
- The Easter Egg Archive – large archive of all kinds of Easter eggs.
- Easter egg: Information from Answers.com – Includes history of Easter eggs.
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 20 November 2008, at 01:15.
Wikipedia Authorship and Review
Wikipedia content provided here is not reviewed directly by PediaView.com. Wikipedia content is authored by an open community of volunteers and is not produced by or in any way affiliated with PediaView.com.
Wikipedia Usage Guidelines
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article on "Easter egg (media)".
The URL for this specific entry is:
All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details). Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
