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I mentioned this elsewhere, but recently I came across a model of Inland
keyboard for sale at Microcenter that did not have the Windows logo on
the "Start" keys.
I think this classifies as a sick Windows trick because it is so rare
to find a common non-specialty keyboard like this. It has bugged me for
ages that modern keyboards always include Microsoft's trademarked, proprietary,
logo as a standard key. Microsoft started this nonsense back in the mid
1990s to make non-Windows OSes seem out of place on a PC. Before that,
PC keyboards included no such key and doing so would have been unthinkable.
Bill must not have given the manufacturer enough bribe money. I'm sure
some legs were broken over this.
Speaking of rare items, apparently Aldus briefly sold a version of
PageMaker 2 that ran under Windows 1.x. At the time most desktop
publishers used a Macintosh, so if any copies of the Windows version even
still exist, they are extremely rare.
This photo is from the Computer Chronicles, where they demonstrate PageMaker
running on a PC.
A video of this segment is on Youtube: PageMaker
running under Windows 1.0
Here is another sick Windows 8 trick: Windows 8 running comfortably
on a 14" monitor. It works great, because this was the size of screen Windows
8 was designed for.
Oh, I'm sorry did you upgrade to an over 9000 inch monitor? Well, that
is obsolete now as you must upgrade to something SMALLER!
Do more than one thing at a time? Forget about it. Make your penis look
bigger? Nope!
Makes me wish I had kept my old VGA 14" (or was it 13"?) Vtec Laser
CRT monitor. I used to use that on my 286 with my ISA Video 7 VGA 1024i.
It could do 1024*768 interlaced, and Windows 8 with "Metro" would have
worked wonderfully. I guess it wasn't obsolete after all!
This has been floating round the internet. As it turns out, Windows
8 has a striking resemblance to AOL's 1990's "Kid's Only" service.
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