Windows XP wallpaper turns XNUMX

    Windows XP wallpaper turns XNUMX

    There are images that remain etched in the mind throughout life: and what better example, in computer science, of Windows XP default wallpaper depicting those quiet and green hills that inspired a sense of peace and tranquility to anyone who looked at it?


    Well that background was called - and is still called today - Bliss and, in 2016, has accomplished the beauty of twenty years! 

    At this point the accounts may not add up: if Windows XP today is an "old man" fifteen, how does his background have twenty? Simple: the background was not created ad-hoc but derives from a real photo, moreover not too modified.


    Preliminary information

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    Flashback to 1996, when National Geographic photographer Charles O'Rear - looking for an image for a book - took that photo in California immediately after a storm; perfect photo thanks to the combination of skills and particular camera settings, but which turned out not to be suitable for the book in question.


    O'Rear then decided to license it on the Corbis engine and, precisely through Corbis, the artist was contacted a few years later by Microsoft to buy not only a concession but the entire rights; O'Rear by contract has never been able to reveal the exact sum received, however the artist has hinted that it was a very high sum.

    The curiosities do not end there: it was O'Rear himself who brought the image to Seattle because, including the "weight" of the burden, the local couriers refused to shoulder the responsibility given the relatively low insurance coverage; in addition, Microsoft admitted to slightly cropping the image on the left to better adapt it to desktops.


    This is the short story of Bliss, that background that will forever remain etched in the minds of digital people who have lived the era of Windows XP.

    And maybe there is someone, like me, who at the sight of that photo still imagines today to listen to the sound of the operating system start-up. Or maybe not?

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