ANSWERS: 4
-
MICROSOFT WINDOWS The Microsoft Windows flag was first introduced in 1990 with MS Windows 3.0. It replaced the 'blibbet' (a striped and stylised middle letter O of the brand name). The primary flag, bearing red, blue, yellow and green squares, was quickly acknowledged as the marque by which customers identified the product. It has subsequently been utilised as an adaptable logo for Microsoft's off and online needs. Microsoft's flag has evolved in three phases. A static pixellated version was used for more than a decade and replaced in 2001 by a simplified version that dispensed with the flag's severe black outline. The revised flag was the first digital logo to appear as a performing animated sequence, during the booting up of Microsoft Windows packages. The logo was updated in 2007 (for Windows Vista) to introduce a more web 2.0-oriented styling, within a reflective glass
-
Well they made it as a symbol of tthe Windows, but i realy dont know how they made that colors...
-
It's entirely likely they don't mean anything. Red, Green, Yellow and Blue are the four "pure" colours that are considered when looking at colour cognition in psychology. The colours were probably chosen for the logo because they stand out and easily contrast to the human eye.
-
I'm guessing because they contrast well and look good together? Well, imagine if Microsoft picked yellow, purple, pink, and orange...
Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC

by 