Arjun tried to open the file again. The portable app asked: "Do you consent to share 0.01% of project overrun time per day?" He clicked "No." The software closed. When he reopened it, his project plan was gone — replaced by a single task: "Pay 40 hours of unbillable overtime to unknown recipient."
Arjun’s company lost three bids that month because corrupted project files poisoned their timelines. The USB stick was eventually smashed with a hammer in a parking lot.
Arjun was a junior project manager at a mid-sized construction firm. His boss, Nina, had just slammed a 300-page tender document on his desk. "Update the Gantt chart by Friday. Use MS Project 2010 — the license on your laptop expired yesterday."
Panic set in. The IT team was swamped. Then Arjun remembered a forum thread: "microsoft project 2010 portable.zip – no install, no key, runs from USB." microsoft project 2010 portable.zip
It sounds like you're looking for a fictional or cautionary tale involving a file named — which, for the record, doesn’t exist as a legitimate release from Microsoft. So here’s a short story based on that premise. Title: The Deadline Ghost
Arjun never downloaded a "portable" corporate tool again. If it comes in a mysterious .zip instead of a legitimate ISO or installer from Microsoft, it’s not portable — it’s a problem waiting to happen.
The software opened. It looked exactly like MS Project 2010 — menus, calendars, resource sheets, all there. Arjun built a perfect schedule in four hours. He saved the .mpp file, zipped everything back onto his USB stick, and went home. Arjun tried to open the file again
Nina gave him a final warning. "Next time," she said, "just ask for a license."
His computer began lagging. Files were copying themselves to the USB drive at midnight. Emails went out to clients with gibberish attachments named invoice_final_final_v3.mpp . The IT forensics team later found a hidden miner in the portable executable — not for crypto, but for computational time . It was syphoning processing cycles to brute-force old password hashes on a darknet contract.
He found the file on a shadowy file-sharing site. The download was fast. Inside the zip was a green executable: msproject_portable.exe . No warnings from his antivirus — odd, but he was too stressed to care. The USB stick was eventually smashed with a
His Gantt chart had shifted. Tasks that had taken two days now showed minus 3 hours . Resource names had changed: "Concrete supply" read "Dark ledger entry." The project finish date read "01/01/1900" — then flipped to "Never."
The next morning, strange things happened.