Oh, Apple. You shouldn’t have. It’s far too accurate (discovered by David R. Perek)
Via Digg.
By Pete Mortensen •
Oh, Apple. You shouldn’t have. It’s far too accurate (discovered by David R. Perek)
Via Digg.
Pete Mortensen is a design strategist for consulting firm Jump Associates and the co-author of Wired to Care: How Companies Prosper When They Create Widespread Empathy, a book and blog that are significantly more interesting than you might initially think. Pete’s particular Apple avocations are both around design–interface and industrial. Follow him on Twitter!
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18 responses to “Windows Machines Represented in Leopard With Blue Screen of Death”
That’s not surprising at all…
Bwahahahahahaha! Never say that the programmers at Apple don’t have a sense of humor.
priceless
@JT. Uh…who was saying that exactly?
OMG. i work in a call center for apple (plenty blue screens actualy on leopard hahahahha) but that aside this is going to be awesome when i tell them about this. HAHAHAHAHAHAHA, i really gotta find a windows machine and show them this :). thanks guys.
Don’t worry Uncle Steve, we still love you, you adorable ape.
Joe
info@steamteam.ca
I thought it was a Joke until I saw my friends computer on their home network.
This only applies to machines sharing with SMB, right?
The CRT display is also funny. It looks generically antique.
When Jobs shows a Windows screen in one of his presentations, it’s always running Solitaire. That would have worked also. They could change to that in 10.5.1 to tone it down a notch and this would still be a classic BSOD appearance.
The Leopard icons are about the same resolution as a real BSOD, that’s why you can read the BSOD text in the Leopard icon.
Although I’ve made my livelihood with Windows for many years, I would have pretty much laughed my ass off at this.
In, say, 1998.
How traditionally snide and unnecessary. How uncharacteristically out-of-touch.