The Google search engine help seekers by offering spark of snow by the time they do a search with keyword “let it snow”.
When searchers typed the words “let it snow” in the search box, then it will appear on the screen monitor snow drops them, followed by condensation. You can remove the freeze by holding the left mouse button or pressing the “Defrost system”.
However this does not apply on the old browser, especially on the Internet Explorer 6, 7, and 8. Or Mozilla Firefox version old.
“Let It Snow” only works on browsers that support the “Canvas”. It is part of the code of HTML 5’s new and a lot of other developers using the code to create a new web page. A spokesman said the version of Internet Explorer 9 already supports it.
The snow effect comes after Google launched another Easter egg called “Do a Barrel” one month earlier. These keywords will be doing the rounds on the monitor screen if the type in the search box.
Here is some Google Easter Egg that you can try:
Askew
The search engine appears slightly off kilter when you type in “askew” into Google.
The loneliest number
It’s official. Google told me so. Type in “what is the loneliest number?” into Google and it will deliver the answer “the loneliest number = 1”.
Chuck Norris
The Internet wouldn’t be cool without a Chuck Norris Easter egg. Searching for Chuck Norris used to prove futile on Google, returning a slightly funny, slightly annoying message: “Google won’t search for Chuck Norris because it knows you don’t find Chuck Norris, he finds you.”
This Easter egg unfortunately appears to have been disabled.
Gravity
Bring Google down to Earth by entering “Google gravity” and clicking “I’m Feeling Lucky” — you may have to disable “Instant predictions” in the search settings dialog first. Then watch as the Google logo and all the icons plummet to the bottom of the screen.
Recursion
Remember when you entered the giant hall of mirrors at the circus as a kid and saw a reflection of you repeated an infinite number of times? That’s recursion. Type it into Google and it will ask you “did you mean recursion?”
If you click on Google’s suggestion the same suggestion will appear. If you click on that suggestion, Google suggestions will ask you “did you mean recursion?” Keep clicking and you’ll forever be stuck in a loop of Google suggestions. Because that’s what recursion is — a procedure that repeats itself indefinitely.
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