Hindi Movie concepts copied from Hollywood, British, Korean movies. Essentially Hindi movies copied from any language to make up for the lack of originality, ideas and inherent laziness of script writers and fat cat producers in Popular Hindi Cinema. The only Indianisation that will happen will be an out of place dance number to appeal to the LCD.
Any popular Hindi movie of the last 3 decades. From Sholay to Zinda
Rahul: Hey Hari, "Main Aisa hi hoon" was a great experimental movie.
Hari: Dude, that was a total Ctrl C Ctrl V movie. Didn't u see "I Am Sam".
Rahul: Hey Hari, "Main Aisa hi hoon" was a great experimental movie.
Hari: Dude, that was a total Ctrl C Ctrl V movie. Didn't u see "I Am Sam".
by Hitesh Shetty January 17, 2006
by randomtechguy January 04, 2020
1. A combination of keys used before a login screen is presented on Windows NT/2000/XP. This is used because it is the only combination that cannot be sent over a network. It is also used to bring up the task manager and, when pressed twice will reset the computer. For this reason it is sometimes called the 'Three-Finger-Salute'.
2. A comic strip written by Tim Buckley relating to computer and console gaming. It can be found at cad-comic.com
2. A comic strip written by Tim Buckley relating to computer and console gaming. It can be found at cad-comic.com
1. d00d! j00 wa5 pwning at CS and j00r b0x0r cr@5h3d! j00 had to use Ctrl-Alt-Del!
2. Did you see the latest Ctrl-Alt-Del comic strip? It was just up a couple of hours ago.
2. Did you see the latest Ctrl-Alt-Del comic strip? It was just up a couple of hours ago.
by Batiu-Drami January 31, 2005
From the web series Red vs Blue, Caboose's keyboard shortcut at command for every time he team kills.
Washington: "I told them Caboose did it. Apparently they already have a shortcut on their keyboard for recording his team kills"
Caboose: "Ctrl+F+U"
Caboose: "Ctrl+F+U"
by confusedfish January 08, 2010
Ctrl+Shift+Esc is an alternative key command to Ctrl+Alt+Del, for systems with Windows Vista or higher/newer installed. It may also be available in older versions of Windows, depending on system configurations (i.e. multiple user accounts are registered to the system/computer). Pressing Ctrl+Alt+Del will typically bring up the Windows Security screen. From there the Task Manager is accessible, among other options (log off, change password, shut down, etc.). In contrast, pressing Ctrl+Shift+Esc will launch the Task Manager directly, skipping the step of navigating the Windows Security screen. Both are equally effective. It is up to the individual user to determine which is most convenient.
In campus library:
Student: "WTF! My laptop froze AGAIN!! I'm never gonna get this assignment done..." -reaches to hold power button down-
Student's friend: "Whoa, wait a sec! Try hitting control, shift, escape. It might be not be Office that's crashing. Save yourself some hassle."
Person across table: -looks over at the two, confused- "Don't you mean control, alt, delete?"
Student's friend: "Same idea, but this is a little quicker."
Person across table: "Oh. I hadn't heard of that. Never mind, then." -shrugs and returns to reading-
Student's friend: -presses ctrl-shift-esc, then navigates Task Manager to look for unresponsive program(s) to close- "See, it was the media player you had going. You would've lost a whole page if you just shut it off like that."
Student: "That's awesome! Thank you!"
Student: "WTF! My laptop froze AGAIN!! I'm never gonna get this assignment done..." -reaches to hold power button down-
Student's friend: "Whoa, wait a sec! Try hitting control, shift, escape. It might be not be Office that's crashing. Save yourself some hassle."
Person across table: -looks over at the two, confused- "Don't you mean control, alt, delete?"
Student's friend: "Same idea, but this is a little quicker."
Person across table: "Oh. I hadn't heard of that. Never mind, then." -shrugs and returns to reading-
Student's friend: -presses ctrl-shift-esc, then navigates Task Manager to look for unresponsive program(s) to close- "See, it was the media player you had going. You would've lost a whole page if you just shut it off like that."
Student: "That's awesome! Thank you!"
by DHotdog85 November 07, 2013
A keyboard shortcut built into the Google Chrome browser (and some others) which, when invoked, closes all tabs in the focused window. Used to instantly erase visual evidence of objectionable activity.
I was browsing the Web for adult material when my mother walked into my room. Luckily I used ctrl+shift+w to close the incognito window I was using and she didn't suspect a thing.
by Anonymous Alligator April 06, 2018
by cartman5000 July 26, 2004