Copyright Policy Privacy Policy Contact Us Instagram Facebook
Top Rated Posts ....
Hamid Mir's tweet on hike in petrol prices Hamid Mir's tweet on hike in petrol prices Donald Trump shares video of Iran's biggest bridge 'tumbling town' Donald Trump shares video of Iran's biggest bridge 'tumbling town' US federal agents ​arrest the niece ‌& grand-niece of late Iranian ​General Qassem ​Soleimani after revoking their green card US federal agents ​arrest the niece ‌& grand-niece of late Iranian ​General Qassem ​Soleimani after revoking their green card Mubashir Zaidi's tweet on the arrest of Qassem ​Soleimani's niece & grand niece in America Mubashir Zaidi's tweet on the arrest of Qassem ​Soleimani's niece & grand niece in America Bilal Ghauri's tweet: What Iranian leaders' children are doing in America? Bilal Ghauri's tweet: What Iranian leaders' children are doing in America? Iran Launches Cruise Missile Attack on USS Abraham Lincoln Iran Launches Cruise Missile Attack on USS Abraham Lincoln

Bill Gates Admits the Ctrl+Alt+Del was a Mistake in the Start of Windows

Posted By: Shafique Ahmad, September 27, 2013 | 05:39:28

Telegraph Revealed a mistake by Bill Gates

Originally designed to trigger a reboot of a PC, Ctrl+Alt+Del now allows users to log on to Windows and access the task manager. It is also known as a quick fix for the infamous "blue screen of death" on PCs, and the phrase has been adopted in popular culture to mean "to do away with" something.

Speaking at a fundraising campaign at Harvard University, however, Gates blamed IBM engineer David Bradley for the so-called "three-fingered salute", claiming that he had favoured a single button.

"We could have had a single button, but the guy who did the IBM keyboard design didn't want to give us our single button," he said.

Bradley originally designed Ctrl+Alt+Esc to trigger a reboot, but he found it was too easy to bump the left side of the keyboard and reboot the computer accidentally. He switched the key combination to Ctrl+Alt+Del – a combination that was impossible to press with just one hand on the original IBM PC keyboard.

During IBM's 20th anniversary celebrations, Bradley said that while he may have invented the shortcut, Bill Gates made it famous. However, his involvement has made him something of a programming hero, with fans asking him to autograph keyboards at conferences.


Source



Comments...