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Easter Eggs

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  • G Gary Kirkham

    I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Michael P Butler
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    It's all well and good until a tester finds it and starts reporting bugs in it. :-O Michael The avalanche has started, it's too late for the pebbles to vote.

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    • G Gary Kirkham

      I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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      Rama Krishna Vavilala
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      Gary Kirkham wrote: What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? If it is a commercial app then the answer is no. It is considered to be unsecure code by many. Puting efforts in testing and fixing bugs is much more useful than putting easter eggs "Back in Trivandrum, you'd be dead by now! KEEP OFF!!!"- Nish

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      • G Gary Kirkham

        I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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        Hans Dietrich
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        Gary Kirkham wrote: I am nearing completion of a project What!?! How can you say you're nearing completion if you haven't done the easter egg yet? Here is correct order for project planning: 1. Decide on project name 2. Implement easter egg 3. Do rest of project crap

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        • H Hans Dietrich

          Gary Kirkham wrote: I am nearing completion of a project What!?! How can you say you're nearing completion if you haven't done the easter egg yet? Here is correct order for project planning: 1. Decide on project name 2. Implement easter egg 3. Do rest of project crap

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          G Offline
          Gary Kirkham
          wrote on last edited by
          #5

          I am really screwed up...I did it in this order Do some of project crap Decide on project name Do rest of project crap Implement easter egg Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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          • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

            Gary Kirkham wrote: What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? If it is a commercial app then the answer is no. It is considered to be unsecure code by many. Puting efforts in testing and fixing bugs is much more useful than putting easter eggs "Back in Trivandrum, you'd be dead by now! KEEP OFF!!!"- Nish

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            K Offline
            Kant
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            Rama Krishna wrote: If it is a commercial app then the answer is no. I agree. In my early years (in US) of coding I did that mistake. At the end of my project I included a nice easter eggs in big banking application. Some how the testers came to know about it. The rest of the story you can guess it. :( Cricket World Cup [^] First Match South Africa vs West Indies Feb 9th 2003 Match begins at 06:15AM EST

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            • G Gary Kirkham

              I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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              V Offline
              Vagif Abilov
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              I don't do it anymore (did it only couple of times). First, I hate any sequence of bytes that makes application bigger. I can spend a day trying to figure out how to make a program files smaller, so reserving extra space for easter eggs does not make me feel good. Second, if I have free programming time now, I try to spend it on writing unit tests. IMO, there are more interesting things than easter eggs. Вагиф Абилов MCP (Visual C++) Oslo, Norway Hex is for sissies. Real men use binary. And the most hardcore types use only zeros - uppercase zeros and lowercase zeros. Tomasz Sowinski

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              • G Gary Kirkham

                I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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                palbano
                wrote on last edited by
                #8

                I agree with the other comments, specifically ones pertaining to doing more useful work. Also, in todays internet world it would be more helpful to provide a web site for the product containing information helpful to users, testers or whom ever. That would be a more appropriate place to house information regarding the team responsible for the product. "No matter where you go, there your are..." - Buckaoo Banzi <pete/>

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                • V Vagif Abilov

                  I don't do it anymore (did it only couple of times). First, I hate any sequence of bytes that makes application bigger. I can spend a day trying to figure out how to make a program files smaller, so reserving extra space for easter eggs does not make me feel good. Second, if I have free programming time now, I try to spend it on writing unit tests. IMO, there are more interesting things than easter eggs. Вагиф Абилов MCP (Visual C++) Oslo, Norway Hex is for sissies. Real men use binary. And the most hardcore types use only zeros - uppercase zeros and lowercase zeros. Tomasz Sowinski

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                  Paul Watson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  Vagif Abilov wrote: I don't do it anymore (did it only couple of times). First, I hate any sequence of bytes that makes application bigger. I can spend a day trying to figure out how to make a program files smaller, so reserving extra space for easter eggs does not make me feel good Damn straight! With only 640k of available mem we need every bit we can scrounge! And with those 720k floppies one really has to work hard at apps... Vagif Abilov wrote: Second, if I have free programming time now, I try to spend it on writing unit tests. IMO, there are more interesting things than easter eggs Vagif. All work and no play makes Abilov a dull developer. :)

                  Paul Watson
                  Bluegrass
                  Cape Town, South Africa

                  Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

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                  • K Kant

                    Rama Krishna wrote: If it is a commercial app then the answer is no. I agree. In my early years (in US) of coding I did that mistake. At the end of my project I included a nice easter eggs in big banking application. Some how the testers came to know about it. The rest of the story you can guess it. :( Cricket World Cup [^] First Match South Africa vs West Indies Feb 9th 2003 Match begins at 06:15AM EST

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                    B Offline
                    benjymous
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    You should've put in nice credits for the testers - that'd stop them complaining :) -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!

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                    • G Gary Kirkham

                      I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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                      Paul Watson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      Gary Kirkham wrote: I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Obviously if your work has a rule against it, then don't, and don't think you can slip it by. If there is no rule and you have some time to kill, go for it I say. Don't make it offensive or too big though, people need to see the lighter side of it. I have made a few for websites. Bit harder to hide but I normally link it to some obscure IIS error. :) And sorry, but talk about a bunch of No Fun Decafinated Low Fat serious people. Unit testing? More "appropriate" work? A security threat? WTF? Where has the fun and joy of it all gone to? Sound like wannabe managers to me ;) If your product is stable and you need to push back and relax then putting in an easter egg is damned fun. Good for morale, makes people laugh and is not some kind of serious threat to your code, really. Relax people.

                      Paul Watson
                      Bluegrass
                      Cape Town, South Africa

                      Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

                      G 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • H Hans Dietrich

                        Gary Kirkham wrote: I am nearing completion of a project What!?! How can you say you're nearing completion if you haven't done the easter egg yet? Here is correct order for project planning: 1. Decide on project name 2. Implement easter egg 3. Do rest of project crap

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Megan Forbes
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        Hans Dietrich wrote: 1. Decide on project name 2. Implement easter egg 3. Do rest of project crap :-D The life we dream of!


                        Throw in a bit of S&M or eye-ball sucking**-Paul Watson on the merits of swearing, sex and obscenities in CP posts** ...they assumed that reasonably intelligent adults would know enough to leave the building if it was burning. Those who did not were, presumably, expendable, and there was less paperwork involved than trying to fire them**-Roger Wright on fire drills at work**

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                        • M Michael P Butler

                          It's all well and good until a tester finds it and starts reporting bugs in it. :-O Michael The avalanche has started, it's too late for the pebbles to vote.

                          P Offline
                          P Offline
                          Paul Watson
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          Michael P Butler wrote: It's all well and good until a tester finds it and starts reporting bugs in it. That must have been a Priority One Humour Alert Warning tester. He needs ten hours of Black Adder therapy I reckon. But then I have had back an alpha-testing report with this gem: "The site was never meant to have multiple languages. Yet on page profile.asp all the content is in Latin. Sample to follow: 'Ipsum lorem...'"* That had me laughing for a good few days. * If you don't get it, don't worry. The text 'Ipsum lorem...' is common filler text used on websites and graphic designs when no real content is available.

                          Paul Watson
                          Bluegrass
                          Cape Town, South Africa

                          Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

                          P 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • K Kant

                            Rama Krishna wrote: If it is a commercial app then the answer is no. I agree. In my early years (in US) of coding I did that mistake. At the end of my project I included a nice easter eggs in big banking application. Some how the testers came to know about it. The rest of the story you can guess it. :( Cricket World Cup [^] First Match South Africa vs West Indies Feb 9th 2003 Match begins at 06:15AM EST

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                            G Offline
                            Gary Kirkham
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #14

                            Damn bankers have no sense of humor anyway. This is an engineering app...they tend to have a sense of humor, even if it is warped. :) Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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                            • P Paul Watson

                              Vagif Abilov wrote: I don't do it anymore (did it only couple of times). First, I hate any sequence of bytes that makes application bigger. I can spend a day trying to figure out how to make a program files smaller, so reserving extra space for easter eggs does not make me feel good Damn straight! With only 640k of available mem we need every bit we can scrounge! And with those 720k floppies one really has to work hard at apps... Vagif Abilov wrote: Second, if I have free programming time now, I try to spend it on writing unit tests. IMO, there are more interesting things than easter eggs Vagif. All work and no play makes Abilov a dull developer. :)

                              Paul Watson
                              Bluegrass
                              Cape Town, South Africa

                              Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

                              J Offline
                              J Offline
                              Jorgen Sigvardsson
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              Paul Watson wrote: Vagif. All work and no play makes Abilov a dull developer. Yes, but all work and no play makes Abilov look like a serious programmer, and will be perhaps the first one to receive a raise. :) -- "It is amazing how f-ing crazy I really am."

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                              • P Paul Watson

                                Gary Kirkham wrote: I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Obviously if your work has a rule against it, then don't, and don't think you can slip it by. If there is no rule and you have some time to kill, go for it I say. Don't make it offensive or too big though, people need to see the lighter side of it. I have made a few for websites. Bit harder to hide but I normally link it to some obscure IIS error. :) And sorry, but talk about a bunch of No Fun Decafinated Low Fat serious people. Unit testing? More "appropriate" work? A security threat? WTF? Where has the fun and joy of it all gone to? Sound like wannabe managers to me ;) If your product is stable and you need to push back and relax then putting in an easter egg is damned fun. Good for morale, makes people laugh and is not some kind of serious threat to your code, really. Relax people.

                                Paul Watson
                                Bluegrass
                                Cape Town, South Africa

                                Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                Gary Kirkham
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #16

                                Paul Watson wrote: Low Fat serious people:) I am on a low fat diet an it is about to kill me...My dam cholesterol is at 140, so at least my doctor doesn't bitch at me any more. Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

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                                • G Gary Kirkham

                                  Paul Watson wrote: Low Fat serious people:) I am on a low fat diet an it is about to kill me...My dam cholesterol is at 140, so at least my doctor doesn't bitch at me any more. Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  Paul Watson
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #17

                                  Gary Kirkham wrote: I am on a low fat diet an it is about to kill me...My dam cholesterol is at 140, so at least my doctor doesn't bitch at me any more. Ouch, I will probably get their one day, not a very healthy eater, just eat what I like. But at Seattle Coffee Company shops (owned by Starbucks now) they actually have a No Fun coffee. Basically it is no caffeine, no fat, no cream and no sugar. i.e. No fun at all. I always have a laugh at that.

                                  Paul Watson
                                  Bluegrass
                                  Cape Town, South Africa

                                  Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

                                  J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • B benjymous

                                    You should've put in nice credits for the testers - that'd stop them complaining :) -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!

                                    K Offline
                                    K Offline
                                    Kant
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #18

                                    benjymous wrote: You should've put in nice credits for the testers - that'd stop them complaining I have included all the testers names.. The total project team includes around 150 people. Cricket World Cup [^] First Match South Africa vs West Indies Feb 9th 2003 Match begins at 06:15AM EST

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • K Kant

                                      Rama Krishna wrote: If it is a commercial app then the answer is no. I agree. In my early years (in US) of coding I did that mistake. At the end of my project I included a nice easter eggs in big banking application. Some how the testers came to know about it. The rest of the story you can guess it. :( Cricket World Cup [^] First Match South Africa vs West Indies Feb 9th 2003 Match begins at 06:15AM EST

                                      D Offline
                                      D Offline
                                      Daniel Turini
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #19

                                      Kant wrote: Some how the testers came to know about it. Maybe, testing the application? :) I see dumb people

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                                      • G Gary Kirkham

                                        I am nearing completion of a project and have been toying with the idea of including an easter egg in my software to give name credit to the developers. I don't own the software, but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it. What is your opinion? Do any of you do this? Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs I thought I wanted a career, turns out I just wanted paychecks

                                        D Offline
                                        D Offline
                                        dorkshoe
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #20

                                        Gary Kirkham wrote: but I don't think that the people I work for have a rule against it Yes they do! The rules are professionalism and ethics. How would you like it if you bought a bag of concrete and the people filling the bags thought it would be cool if they put in some cherrios? Grow up! -dork

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                                        • P Paul Watson

                                          Michael P Butler wrote: It's all well and good until a tester finds it and starts reporting bugs in it. That must have been a Priority One Humour Alert Warning tester. He needs ten hours of Black Adder therapy I reckon. But then I have had back an alpha-testing report with this gem: "The site was never meant to have multiple languages. Yet on page profile.asp all the content is in Latin. Sample to follow: 'Ipsum lorem...'"* That had me laughing for a good few days. * If you don't get it, don't worry. The text 'Ipsum lorem...' is common filler text used on websites and graphic designs when no real content is available.

                                          Paul Watson
                                          Bluegrass
                                          Cape Town, South Africa

                                          Roger Wright wrote: Using a feather is kinky; using the whole chicken is perverted!

                                          P Offline
                                          P Offline
                                          Philip Fitzsimons
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #21

                                          he was right though, as its actually meant to be "lorem ipsum..." :-D


                                          "When the only tool you have is a hammer, a sore thumb you will have."

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