“When you double-click the file, SimpleText will open it,” Brown explains on his weblog simply earlier than displaying the hidden staff picture that emerges after following the steps.
The invention represents one of many final undocumented Easter eggs from the pre-Steve Jobs return period at Apple. The Easter egg works by way of Mac OS 9.0.4 however seems to have been disabled by model 9.1, Brown notes. The timing aligns with Jobs’ reported ban on Easter eggs when he returned to Apple in 1997, although Brown wonders whether or not Jobs ever knew about this specific secret.
Credit score:
Jonathan Zufi
In his put up, Brown expressed hope that he would possibly join with the Apple staff featured within the picture—a hope that was rapidly fulfilled. Within the feedback, a person named Invoice Saperstein recognized himself because the chief of the G3 staff (pictured fourth from left within the second row) within the hidden picture.
“All of us knew concerning the Easter egg, however as you point out; the approach to extract it modified from earlier Macs (though the situation was the identical),” Saperstein wrote within the remark. “This resulted from an Easter egg within the unique PowerMac that contained Paula Abdul (with out permissions, in fact). So the G3 staff needed to nonetheless have our footage within the ROM, however we needed to hold it very secret.”
He additionally shared behind-the-scenes particulars in one other remark, noting that his “bunch of ragtag engineers” developed the profitable G3 line as a skunk works undertaking, with {hardware} that Jobs later was the groundbreaking iMac sequence of computer systems. “The staff was actually a bunch of proficient individuals (each hw and sw) that have been believers within the structure I offered,” Saperstein wrote, “and executed the design behind the scenes for a 12 months till Jon Rubenstein obtained wind of it and offered it to Steve and the remaining is ‘historical past.'”