Windows "Secrets"

  • billion57
    2nd Aug 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    Does anyone know of anything like God Mode (for Windows)?

     

    P.S.- If you don't know what God Mode is, search it on Google or something (it's not just Windows 7).

  • Poorsoft
    2nd Aug 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    Ooooh, interesting! I see it was posted in Jan. 2010. Lol, but still, I dunno.

  • billion57
    2nd Aug 2012 Member 0 Permalink

      -_-

  • limelier
    2nd Aug 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    Don't know any secrets except the Telnet cmd thing.

  • Dingolo
    2nd Aug 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    What does actually "God Mode" does?

  • boxmein
    2nd Aug 2012 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    @Dingolo (View Post)
    There's a explorer link you can do to make a folder link to Action Center, it has a large list of every task you could do with Windows.

    If you go to Command Prompt (You need telnet enabled!), you can "telnet towel.blinkenlights.nl" to see a nice ASCIImation.

    If you "net send <local-ip> <message" you can in theory send alert messages over the network.
    Pressing F2 will rename files.
    Pressing F2 while selecting multiple files will have an index for them.

    Also, here are a few threads with 9000+ comments each:
    [Thread 1]
    [Thread 2]
  • Veldin
    2nd Aug 2012 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • jenn4
    2nd Aug 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    @Veldin (View Post)
    Linux terminal is just a replica of windows command prompt, to be accurate. Linux was developed after windows.
  • Veldin
    2nd Aug 2012 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • jacksonmj
    2nd Aug 2012 Developer 0 Permalink
    @jenn4 (View Post)
    To be accurate, Linux terminal has more in common with Unix shells than windows command prompt, and Unix shells were developed before windows.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bourne_shell (most modern Linux systems have a shell compatible with this):
    "It was released in 1977"

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/86-DOS (precursor to MS-DOS):
    "QDOS v0.1 - July 1980 - Roughly half completed version of the OS."


    Anyway, this seems to be a little bit off topic.