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Windows默認壁紙Bliss的前世今生

(2014-08-02 19:53:33) 下一個


















眾所周知,Windows XP默認的桌麵是Bliss,而鮮為人知的是Bliss其實是一段愛情故事的副產品。

那是1996年一個平常的周五下午,攝影師查爾斯·奧利爾(Charles O’Rear)開車穿越美國加州的葡萄酒之鄉去見當時的女朋友達芙妮。奧利爾稱之後他與女友結了婚,而他拍攝的Bliss變成世界上最具標誌性的圖片,被選作微軟操作係統的默認壁紙。

“那是一年冬至,外麵下過大雨,草地愈發的翠綠。我開著車駛過這片美麗的蜿蜒小道去見達芙妮,暴風雨剛過,天空飄著白雲,我覺得是時候出來拍幾張照片了。”奧利爾說道。

他拿出瑪米亞RZ67中畫幅相機並拍攝下Bliss,這並非他首次試圖捕捉高山的美麗。

“這片區域因連綿起伏的丘陵而聞名,我拍攝了很多次,然而產生的顏色從未有64年柯達彩色膠片顯示的這麽好,顏色從未如此翠綠。”

然而,Bliss與20世紀90年代末的樣子大不相同。 無論人們怎麽猜測,當奧利爾將Bliss交給美國高品(Corbis)有限公司時,這張原始圖片未經過任何改動和編輯, Corbis是由比爾蓋茨於1989年創立的照片交易和圖片授權服務的公司。

當時高品公司可能隻有50名記錄的攝影師,而現在它的數據庫裏已經有1億多張圖片了。

Bliss被微軟購買,具體金額仍是未知。由於保密協議奧利爾無法透露具體價格,但這是購買單張圖片所付出的最大金額之一。

微軟是如何發現這張照片的,奧利爾無從得知,也許是通過關鍵詞或短語搜索,例如“連綿起伏的丘陵”?

“在Windows XP出來的幾年後,有一天我收到了來自微軟一名工程師的郵件。信件裏寫道,‘我們非常好奇這張照片是在哪裏拍攝的?我們工程部門的很多人認為這是利用Photopshop後期合成的,有的人甚至認為這張照片是在華盛頓微軟總部附近拍攝的。’” 奧利爾描述道。“很可惜你們都錯了,這張照片是真實的,是我在居住的地方附近拍攝的,所見即所得,照片沒有經過任何處理和加工。”

微軟隻是將這張照片裁剪成適合桌麵配置的大小。

出於娛樂,奧利爾借助他拍攝的其他照片的元素利用Photoshop再造了Bliss。和圖片不一樣,操作係統具有有效期,微軟將於4月8日終結對Windows XP的支持、軟件更新和安全補丁。因此,Bliss的未來在哪裏?這張照片是否會與OS聯姻?

“我認為這張照片將成為永恒的傳說,當你90歲的時候,一張類似Bliss的圖片出現時你將會說,噢我記得它,它是我們當時使用的電腦桌麵。

現在你拿著這張照片給全世界任何地方的路人看,他們肯定會說我在哪裏見過這一景象。”雖然具體有多少人見過Bliss仍不清楚,但奧利爾估計至少有10億人。

Windows XP的普及意味著奧利爾的作品廣為流傳。 雖然Bliss是張如此標誌性和廣為人知的圖片,但不是每個人都像奧利爾一樣過度關注這張圖片。

“幾年前我登上了澳大利亞昆士蘭的一艘渡船,船上所有顯示屏的背景都是Bliss,我對渡船公司的一名女性員工說,那張照片是我拍的,她回答說那又怎樣?”

雖然奧利爾在攝影生涯中使用過大量膠片照相機,但他卻是數字攝影的狂熱支持者。現在他隻隨身攜帶一部照相機——鬆下Lumix LX3,這部配有28毫米鏡頭的照相機並不是最新款,卻很適合奧利爾。

當被問及現代高端數字照相機是否可能再造Bliss的外觀和感覺時,奧利爾認為它“可能青出於藍而勝於藍”。“我認為鏡頭才是現在的挑戰,它們是照相機最弱的部分,你可以擁有100兆16比特的圖片,即使你的鏡頭不符合標準也不要緊,你也能產生10兆的文件。”

奧利爾曾為美國國家地理拍攝過圖片,也擔任洛杉磯時報的攝影師,現在他主要花時間在拍攝全球各地製造葡萄酒的過程,圖片主要用於書籍和他的個人網站等。

據他的妻子達芙妮表示,奧利爾是同時代為數不多從膠片攝影轉移到數字攝影的攝影師之一,在經曆了8年的數字攝影後,他似乎並沒有重回膠片攝影的打算。

“純粹的攝影已成曆史,當我們看國家地理等雜誌時,它們的封麵不再使用純粹的照片來吸引讀者。取而代之的是插圖,它們可以隨意被操縱,完全取決於讀者想要的是什麽。當你能夠在平板電腦、手機或者電腦上閱讀,並獲得聲音、視覺甚至更好的色彩時,誰還會想要翻開雜誌書看?”對於那些懷舊的人來說,他們可能還會將Bliss設為電子設備的桌麵背景。

至於微軟未來的桌麵背景是否會采納奧利爾拍攝的其他照片,奧利爾仍抱有希望。“我給他們留了我的電話號碼,可惜現在還沒有任何人打過來索要照片。” 奧利爾說道。






It's Bliss: behind the iconic Windows XP photo

It's because of her that we've got the photograph.

Although it will forever be associated with Windows XP, Bliss was actually the by-product of a love story. It was a regular Friday afternoon in 1996 when photographer Charles O'Rear took the drive through California's wine country to see his then-girlfriend Daphne.

Chuck, as he introduces himself in conversation, has since married Daphne. Bliss, meanwhile, has gone on to become one of the world's most iconic photographs, chosen as the default wallpaper of Microsoft's operating system.
 
"There's a time of the year in our mid-winter, in January, when we've had rains. The grass is now getting a brilliant green. The storms are still coming through with rain and clouds. While I'm driving this beautiful, winding road to see Daphne, my God, the storm has just gone through, there are some white clouds, boy, I think I'll just get out and make a couple of frames," he says.

Chuck pulled out his medium format Mamiya RZ67 film camera and made Bliss. It wasn't the first time he had attempted to capture the beauty of the hills, though.

"That particular spot, or this area of the wine region, is known for that same thing — the rolling hills. I have been photographing them for a long time, with film. And yet colours never quite came out the same on Kodachrome 64, the best film you could possibly have. They were never quite green enough."

Despite what many people might think, the original frame of Bliss was completely unaltered and unedited by Chuck when he submitted it to Corbis, the stock photo and image licensing service founded by Bill Gates in 1989.

Corbis — which means woven basket in Latin — had maybe 50 photographers on file when Chuck submitted Bliss. Today, there are over 100 million images in the database.

Bliss was purchased by Microsoft for an undisclosed sum. While Chuck can't reveal how much he was paid due to a non-disclosure agreement, it was one of the largest amounts ever paid for a single photograph. He still doesn't know how Microsoft found the photo, whether through keywords or by typing in phrases like "rolling green hills".

"Several years after [Windows XP] came out, an email came to me from one of the engineers, somebody within Microsoft. 'We're just curious about where that photograph was made'," read the email. Chuck continues: "'Most of us in the engineering department think that it was Photoshopped. Some of us think that it was taken not far from Microsoft headquarters in Washington'."

"Sorry guys, you're all wrong," he says. "It's the real deal, it's near where I live, and what you see is what you get. It has not been touched." Microsoft did, however, crop the imagefor the desktop configuration and pumped up the green of the rolling hill. 

Just for fun, Chuck has recreated Bliss entirely in Photoshop, made up of elements from his other photographs. You can see the recreated version here on his Photoshelter page.

Unlike images, operating systems have a use-by date. Microsoft will end support, software updates and security patches for Windows XP on 8 April. So what is the future for Bliss, the photo that remains inevitably tied to the OS?

"I think it's going to be around forever," he says. "When you are 90 years old, somewhere a photograph like Bliss will appear and you will say 'I remember that. When we had computers on our desk, that was on the screen'. Anywhere on this planet right now, if you stop somebody on the street and you show somebody that photograph, they're going to say 'I've seen that somewhere, I recognise that'."

Although there can never be a true indication of how many people have seen Bliss, Chuck estimates it is in the billions. The worldwide spread of Windows XP means that he has seen his own work in some far-flung places.

"The neatest place I have seen was recently, actually it was in the past couple of weeks. An American photographer was allowed to go into North Korea. One of [the photographer's images] was in some power plant, there's a big board where two men were sitting. What's on the screen? Bliss."

"Under the White House there's something called the situation room ... there were maybe 10 or 15 monitors and what was on the monitors? Bliss. I'm sure before they allowed the photographer to come in they had to clean all of the screens, make sure there was no stuff on there we couldn't share with the world."

With a photo as iconic and as well-known as Bliss, there are bound to be people who don't quite share the same exuberance for the image as Chuck does.

"A couple of years ago we got on a ferry out of Townsville [in Queensland, Australia]. There it is on all the monitors. To the woman who was working for the ferry company, I said 'that's my photograph!' and she said 'so what?'"

Despite using a myriad of film cameras during his photographic career, Chuck is now a fierce proponent of digital photography. He carries just one camera with him now — a Panasonic Lumix LX3. With a 28mm-equivalent lens "which I love", the LX3 is not a new camera by any means, but it does the job for him.

When asked if a modern day high-end digital camera could recreate the look and feel of Bliss, Chuck believes that it could "probably do an even better job" than a medium format film model.

"I think the lenses are now the challenge. [They] are now the weakest part of the camera. You can have a 100MB 16-bit image, yet if your lens is not up to par, it doesn't matter, you might as well have a 10MB file."

Chuck's previous photographic roles included stints at National Geographic and he was a staff photographer at the Los Angeles Times. Now, he spends his time photographing wine-producing regions across the globe for books, professional assignments and his website, wineviews.com.

According to his wife Daphne, Chuck was one of the last photographers of his generation to move over to digital. Now, he doesn't see himself going back after seven or eight years on the other side.

On assignment in the film days, Chuck says that every time a photographer made an exposure they had "no idea" whether or not they got the photo or not. "The first person to look at that was going to be an editor in Washington. Every shot's gotta count." Now, the photographer has the scope to edit, crop and present a finished image before it gets reviewed.

"In the early days of digital, the histogram was critical. You can't spill over in the black point because on the printed page it's going to get muddy. You've got to have some information on the white side so that when it's on the press that won't become a blank." Now, he says that watching your histogram and being that precise doesn't matter all that much anymore, "because the printed page is going away."

"Pure photography is almost history. When we look at National Geographic, Time ... they're no longer using a pure photograph on the cover to sell the magazine. It's illustrations. It's photographs that are manipulated. They have decided that that's what the reader wants."

"Who wants to open a magazine when you can look at your tablet, phone or computer and get sound and visuals and better colours?"

Maybe for nostalgia's sake, those users will have Bliss as their device's desktop background. Closer to home, Daphne still has the wallpaper gracing the desktop of her home computer.

As for any future Microsoft wallpapers being captured by Chuck's camera, he remains hopeful. "I sent them my phone number but nobody's called yet for another photograph!"







 

 











 


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