In 1985, Microsoft launched Windows 1.0, a graphic personal computer operating environment whose dissemination was one of the fundamental moments of the technological revolution that ushered the democratisation of access to computers and computer language. Since then, “windows” have been defining how we relate to and access digital content. The possibility of browsing between windows, running …
In 1985, Microsoft launched Windows 1.0, a graphic personal computer operating environment whose dissemination was one of the fundamental moments of the technological revolution that ushered the democratisation of access to computers and computer language. Since then, “windows” have been defining how we relate to and access digital content. The possibility of browsing between windows, running through different information streams simultaneously, has generalised a relationship between images that evokes a Warburguian compilation that allows us to establish information hierarchies using …