It's the same thing, but the box, the text, and the arrows are slightly better, and the references are more accurate. Also, Happy St. Patrick's Day!
Visuals: Against a black background, a silver outline of the italic lowercase letters "dfs" in Optima font inside a box streaks out toward the top center of the screen, increasing in brightness and then receding. As the tail end of the streak recedes, a graphic of the letters in white inside a light blue box with a black border fades in on a light-to-dark blue gradient background with a pattern of dark-to-light blue dots. Afterwards, two white arrows with black outlines and off-center tails come from opposite sides of the screen. The arrow coming from the right reads "PROGRAM", points left, and has a tail shifted up; the arrow coming from the left reads "EXCHANGE", points right, and has a tail shifted down. The two arrows cross over each other and lock into position, as the DFS symbol shines. Technique: Camera-controlled animation. Audio: First, multiple high-pitched notes, played on a jangle pop-style guitar. That same sequence is then played again in a lower pitch, which leads into a loud, alarm-like synthesized drone. This was done by Shuki Levy and Haim Saban. Availability: - It appeared on 1980s syndicated prints of Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, and The Abbott and Costello Show, as well as the 1986 Dennis the Menace cartoon, including 2007 broadcasts on Boomerang. - It is intact on most of the episodes on the DVD Dennis the Menace: Trouble, Trouble Everywhere!. - It has been plastered by the 1996 Saban "Twirly-Doo" logo on Maximum Entertainment's DVDs of Dennis the Menace. - It may have appeared on syndicated repeats of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! from the era, which may have been accompanied by the Viacom Productions "V of Doom" logo. Credits to @Midevalknight103 (retired), @JoshsAccount (also retired), and @Pixar2000.