What screenshots of Windows do you have available?
2. Screenshots 31 through 40

Screenshot #31 - Here's another example of something I've seen only once so far. For some reason, when I was trying to make shortcuts, I suddenly get a "file cannot be deleted" notice. Question is, what file is trying to be deleted?





Screenshot #32 - This image has been shrunk to 1/4 the size as it's 1600x1200. This screenshot shows you a typical example of extremes I some times do to try to break programs from exceeding their limits. In this case, it's excessive plays of a single song. Like anyone would listen to a single song 65,536 times to max out a 16-bit unsigned variable. I'm almost immune to the effect of repetitious music, so this seemed like a good challenge.





Screenshot #33 - When I make animations, I need tons of frames saved as a single file each frame. In this case, it was an animated GIF I was making consisting of 90 frames. Each frame was a window in this program. I had to save the BMP files as GIFs so I can have the animation which is why I had all these windows. Today, I don't even need all this and mass-saving 90 BMP frames as GIFs is done in less than a minute, yet with a far better color palette (and coloring rules) than what the program shown here allows. A 641-frame animation could be processed, after the main framing and testing stages, in probably only 3 or 4 minutes, maybe even less (I haven't done it nor timed it). Doing it the way I have here would end up taking next to 7 or 8 hours, 120 times longer.
Yet, this is only the second-most number of windows I've had in this program. My all time most was, I think, 111 from a different animation. In case you're wondering, the order of the frames shown here go from the bottom right corner going upwards then to the left (as if reading a book upsidedown).





Screenshot #34 - Sometimes, probably from a faulty load or install of IE, windows freeze up so well that you absolutely cannot interact with it at all. The only way to close the program was to use control+alt+delete. This causes all other IE windows to close as well, so I have to take serious caution when doing this.





Screenshot #35 - Just finding it down right hilarious to me, I took this screenshot when I was big time copying files on a floppy disk. I had 8 copy operations going at once copying nothing but URL files. This, as of Dec 2, 2004, is my all time top favorite screenshot.





Screenshot #36 - A bit funnier from the previous screenshot, this one shows various error messages popping up at almost the same time. I see two saying of a sharing violation, 3 counts of "file cannot be created", and two counts of "not enough disk space". There are 7 copy operations going on, not 8 as from before which is why there's seven of those errors. So far, as of Dec 2, 2004, there hasn't been any other more extreme copy operation going on.





Screenshot #37 - Yet another extreme thing I've done. One forum has the ability to transfer very close to 19 million bytes in a single HTML document. This is very wild and weird just how big that page is.





Screenshot #38 - Private messages have been editted out but junk mail has been left as is. This, from Hotmail like from around mid-2002, was the most extreme number of messages I've ever seen in my E-mail. More extreme yet, this all accumulated over my sleeping time, about 10 to 12 hours! Usually, in most cases, I get about 50 junk messages per week (as of Dec 2, 2004). This is 20 times that. I wonder what caused this. I've had another extreme case, with half as many messages.





Screenshot #39 - Private messages have been editted out but junk mail has been left as is. This screenshot is almost exactly like screenshot 38, however, about 3 months earlier telling of the second most number of junk messages I've had in one day. I don't understand how they all ended up in my inbox instead of the junk mail folder, but oh well.





Screenshot #40 - Here's yet another extremity I've had. In this case, I wanted to see how much data I could get transferred in the shortest amount of time possible. Indeed, 300 million bytes received in just 8.7 hours, phenomenal with dial-up connections (this works out to 9578.544... bytes per second, twice that of normal dial up). Lately, I haven't been able to get close to that kind of transfer speed, about 3/4 of that so it's extremely hard to bust this record.




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