Skip to main content

SpeedTest Easter egg

There is an Easter egg in Speedtest.  From the results view, pull down the "speedometer-looking" dial.  Behind the dial will be a picture of a disgruntled cat.  Pull the gauge down again and there will be a new pose of the cat.  Repeated pulls keep changing the pose of the cat until the final picture is that of the rage comic, "Y U no…guy."

Speedtest is the popular network speed testing utility from Ookla.  The company offers the speed tester on desktop browsers via Flash as well as iOS and Android devices.  The Y U no guy is a goofy looking cartoon often seen with the caption, "y u no leave me alone."  It's thought to have been derived from the Japanese comic strip Gantz.

The Easter egg is only in the iOS version since the interface of the webpage version doesn't allow for this sort of input, and it doesn't work at all on the Android version.  The Y U no guy cartoon is captioned "Y U no leave now" and is the last image.  To do it again another speed test will need to be run.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Skype Now Supports Emergency Calls In the US

With the latest round of updates to Skype , it was noticed today that the instant messaging and VoIP phone service now supports emergency calling in the United States. The release notes for the most recent update to the Android version of Skype indicated that the service now allows calls to be made to US emergency calling systems via 911.  Telephony services like Skype, Google Voice , and Vonage typically don't offer this emergency calling ability without some sort of intermediate step like deferring to the phone's default dialer, as is the case with Voice, or setting up a physical address location ahead of time which is how Vonage handles it. The indication is that Skype will handle the 911 calls natively, but when verifying with an account that does not have a Skype phone number assigned to it, it was found that the instructions in the FAQ explaining how to turn on emergency calling are not accurate. Emergency calling support in Skype for the United States Interestingly, th...

PHP built-in webserver and IPv6 addresses

Though it's difficult to confirm around the Web, it appears as though the IP address scheme the built-in PHP server uses depends on the host name that's provided.  If a fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) is used, such as server.domain.tld, then the built-in server will be listening for IPv6 based requests.  If the server is started with an IPv4 address identified as the host, then it will naturally listen for IPv4 based requests. The closest to anything official around the Web was a comment in the PHP docs that only seeded this conclusion, at best.  But here it is in any case. Built-in web server http://php.net/manual/en/features.commandline.webserver.php#120449 Ultimately, the following answer from Stack Overflow held the "universal" solution.  Thank you dew010. Running PHP 5.4 built-in web server outside localhost http://stackoverflow.com/a/8377378/2487485 Start your development server like: php -S 0.0.0.0:8989

Allow Windows authentication using SQL Server driver with DBeaver

DBeaver will allow Microsoft Windows single sign on access when connecting to Microsoft SQL Server using the SQL Server driver (rather than jTDS ).  From the driver properties settings, set the integratedSecurity flag to true . Open the Connection configuration panel and choose the Driver properties section. Set the integratedSecurity flag to true . A subtle, but important step is to not provide username and password credentials to the connection.