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・ Boss Fight Entertainment
・ Boss Film Studios
・ Boss for Leader
・ Boss Game Studios
・ Boss General Catalogue
・ BOSS GP
・ Boss Guitar
・ Boss Hog
・ Boss Hog (album)
・ Boss Hogg
・ Boss Hogg Outlaws
・ Boss Hogg Outlawz
・ Boss Horn
・ Boss Hoss Cycles
・ Boss Johnson
Boss key
・ Boss Key Productions
・ Boss Lady
・ Boss Life (album)
・ Boss Media
・ Boss Music (disambiguation)
・ Boss Nigger
・ Boss Number One
・ Boss of All Bosses
・ Boss of Bosses
・ Boss of Bullion City
・ Boss of Me
・ Boss of the Plains
・ Boss of the Pool
・ Boss of the Soul-Stream Trombone


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Boss key : ウィキペディア英語版
Boss key


A boss key or boss button is a special keyboard shortcut used in computer games or other programs to quickly hide the program and possibly display a special screen that appears to be a normal productivity program (such as a spreadsheet application). One of the earliest implementations was by Friendlyware,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=FriendlyWare P.C. Arcade )〕 a suite of entertainment and general interest programs written in BASIC and sold with the original IBM AT and XT computers from 1982 to 1985. When activated (by pressing F10), an ASCII bar graph with generic "Productivity" and "Time" labels appeared. Pressing F10 again would return to the Friendlyware application.
==In computer games==
The purpose of the boss key is to make it appear to superiors and coworkers that an employee is doing his or her job, when they are actually playing games or using the Internet for non work-related tasks. This was a fairly common feature in early computer games for personal computers (discounting the Internet part, which was not then available), when most boss keys were used to show dummy DOS prompts. The use has faded somewhat as modern multitasking operating systems have evolved. However, some programs still retain a boss key feature, such as instant messaging clients or their add-ons or comic book viewers like MComix.
An early example of the boss key is in the IBM PC version of ''Asylum'', which clears the screen when F9 is pressed. Certain games have taken the idea of the boss key and used it to comic effect. Infocom's adult-themed Leather Goddesses of Phobos (only the IBM PC version) had a boss key which would hide the game and show a screen designed to look like a ''Cornerstone'' database view. Upon closer inspection, however, the screen was not exactly boss safe, being populated with order info on rather ridiculous adult items, including an "inflatable milkman". Sierra On-Line's comedy/sci-fi adventure game ''Space Quest III'' had a so-called boss key available from the game's pulldown menu. However, when the user selected it, the screen would cut to black and inform the user that his or her boss wouldn't be happy if he or she knew how long the user had been playing the game. It then displayed the total elapsed game time. The first few games in Sierra's Leisure Suit Larry series included a boss key in the pulldown menus (shortcut usually Ctrl+B). However, when this is used, it results in an instantaneous game over with the first game saying "Sorry, but you'll have to restore your game; when you panic, I forget everything!" The computer submarine game, GATO, when ESC was clicked, brought up a Lotus 1-2-3 type spreadsheet screen.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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