
CHANGE PASSPORT FOR MAC SETTINGS WINDOWS
Also, the Bunny is the icon for the Microsoft Party Line ( rumor.exe) in some pre-release versions of Windows 95. The Microsoft Bunny has an exported function named after him, BUNNY_351 in krnl386.exe. The bunnies' names referred to the fact that Windows 95 was the transitional OS. In addition to the Microsoft Bear, there were two bunnies as well - the smaller 16-bit Bunny and the larger 32-bit Bunny.

Additionally, during the development of Windows 95, the shell developers had several stuffed animals as mascots. This page is accessed by renaming a folder on the desktop to " and now, the moment you’ve all been waiting for", then " we proudly present for your viewing pleasure", and finally " The Microsoft Windows 95 Product Team!". Windows 95 has an animated presentation of its developers, complete with music. Keep repeating this until the Microsoft Bear appears in the window, as seen to the right. Open it again and do so with a different square (with the keys still pressed down). The user can also find the easter egg by opening the About Program Manager, holding down Ctrl, Alt and ⇧ Shift, double click one colored square of the Microsoft Windows logo and then close the window.
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Internally, there was another egg, where several internal system functions (although having meaningful internal names) were exported from user.exe as BEAR NNN (where NNN is the ordinal number of the function) in his honor and to discourage their use by incautious third party software developers. The other one was a reference to a fictitious file named BEAR.EXE in the properties window for the MS-DOS Prompt. bradsi, being in charge of Windows production, is listed first the three other presenters, billg, steveb, and t-bear, appear together in " Special Thanks", the last section of the list. One was the developer credits, where the Bear, along with Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer and Brad Silverberg, present the email aliases of the Windows 3.1 developers. Windows 3.1 has two visible Easter eggs, both of which reference the Microsoft Bear, which was the mascot of the Windows 3.1 development team. This causes the developer credits to appear on the desktop in the form of the email names of the crew.

In Windows 7, this can be done by clicking the start button and choosing "Computer" from the right panel of the menu.Open " Computer" (there are multiple ways this can be done).

