It has become increasingly popular to include a few “easter eggs”, or Easter eggs, in software – for example in the form of some hidden or special lines among hundreds of thousands of lines of code.
Available in Windows 1 from 1985
Microsoft’s developers have been doing this for a long time: for example, they did it in Windows 3.0 when they made it possible to display a list of the names of the developers if you minimized all the programs and keyed “win30”, then quickly pressed F3 and Backspace.
It now turns out that Windows 3.0 was not the first time Microsoft tricked such Easter eggs, and that it started already in Windows 1 RTM, the first version of Windows from 1985.