Adobe Photoshop CS2/CS3 Easter-Egg

hul2000

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Adobe Photoshop CS2/CS3 Easter-Egg

Open Photoshop
Hold down the Ctrl key and go to Help->About Photoshop

You'll see a different "About" screen

in Photoshop CS3 take a screenshot of this About screen and past it to a new document.
Then go to Image -> Adjustments -> Levels and drag the levels slider to the left.
and you'll see something unexpected.
 

G-Force

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  • Jul 5, 2006
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    Ranhiru said:
    Heyy can someone do this and post a screenshot plz...i dont hav PS
    95543140pw5.jpg


    meka machan enne CS2 wala :D
     

    hul2000

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    ahamednishadh said:
    works!!
    by da way wanted to ask u.

    is there sumthing lyk dis for every software????
    and also dreamweaver CS3 ekatath thiyanawada??

    Not all the software have easter eggs. only some.
    I'll check if Dreamweaver CS3 has one.
     

    tdevinda

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    Yep

    ahamednishadh said:
    works!!
    by da way wanted to ask u.

    is there sumthing lyk dis for every software????
    and also dreamweaver CS3 ekatath thiyanawada??
    As far as I know, yes. Almost all the software people put things like this.
    Even in games.
    I remember seeing Hello Freeman written on the walls in HL 1 when I walk in it. Afterwards I heard that it was meant to be an easter egg:baffled: :baffled:
     

    hul2000

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    tdevinda said:
    As far as I know, yes. Almost all the software people put things like this.
    Even in games.
    I remember seeing Hello Freeman written on the walls in HL 1 when I walk in it. Afterwards I heard that it was meant to be an easter egg:baffled: :baffled:

    Microsoft has stopped putting easter eggs in their software :(

    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.