
pause command in DOS requests the user to "Press any key to continue."Incomputing, "Pressany key to continue" (or a similar text) was a historically used prompt to the user when it was necessary to pause processing. The system would resume after the user pressed anykeyboard button.
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Early computers were typically operated using mechanicalteleprinters, which provided a continuous printed record of their output. However, during the 1970s, these became obsolete and were replaced withvisual display units, and text was lost once it scrolled off the top of the screen. To compensate, programs typically paused operation after displaying one screen of data, so that the user could observe the results and then press a key to move to the next screen.
A similar pause was also required when some physical action was required from the user, such as inserting afloppy disk or loading aprinter with paper.
These prompts were commonplace on text-basedoperating systems prior to the development ofgraphical user interfaces, which typically includedscrollbars to enable the user to view more than one screen/window of data. They are therefore no longer required as a means of paginating output, but the graphical equivalent (such as amodal dialog box containing the text "Click OK to continue") is still used for hardware interactions.
The prompt ("any key") is not strictly accurate, in that one is required to press a key which generates some sort of character. For the vast majority of computer systems, pressingmodifier keys orlock keys would not cause processing to resume, as they do not produce an actual character that the program could detect.
Some Samsung remote controls for DVD players, as is the case of DVD-R130, have included an "anykey" to their interface. It is used to view the status of the DVD being watched.[1]

A 1982Apple Computer manual for developers warned:[2]
Do not tell the user to "press any key." ... On the Apple II series computers, you cannot read every key by itself: RESET, SHIFT, CONTROL. We have also found in testing that new users, in particular, panic when asked to press any key. Over 80% of them will turn around and say, "but what key should I press?" In questioning them about this response, we discovered that they are quite convinced that even though the prompt implied that all keys were OK to press, some could be dangerous. Of course, they were quite right.
There are reports from as early as 1988 that some users have searched for such a key labelled "any", and called technical support when they have been unable to find it.[3][4] The computer companyCompaq[5] even edited theirFAQ to explain that the "any" key does not exist,[6][7] and at one point considered replacing the command "Press any key" with "Pressreturn key".[8]
The concept of the "any key" has become a popular piece of computer-related humor,[9] and was used as a gag onThe Simpsons, in the seventh-season episode "King-Size Homer", where Homer Simpson searches the keyboard looking for "the any key".
Plastic "ANY keys" with adhesive backings are available asnovelty gifts.[10]