Microsoft stopped hiding Easter eggs in Windows because the costs — to security, compliance, and customer trust — began to outweigh the nostalgia and developer whimsy that produced those secrets. Background
For more than two decades, Easter eggs were a quirky part of software culture: tiny...
Microsoft stopped quietly tucking playful, undocumented “Easter eggs” into Windows not because developers ran out of whimsy, but because the modern realities of security, enterprise trust, and large-scale software governance make hidden code an unacceptable risk.
Background
Easter eggs —...