Microsoft gets a new logo for the first time since 1987

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  • Crow
    Member
    • Oct 2010
    • 4312

    Microsoft gets a new logo for the first time since 1987

    A lot is at stake when a company changes its logo, and Microsoft changed it a number of times in its early years.


    For the first time in 25 years, Microsoft is changing its corporate logo.

    Microsoft, which has used its solid, boldfaced, italicized logo since 1987, is expected to unveil its new, more colorful logo Thursday at the Boston opening of the 23rd Microsoft store. It will also appear Thursday at the Seattle and Bellevue Microsoft stores, as well as on the microsoft.com home page.

    The new logo, which incorporates a multicolored Windows symbol in addition to the "Microsoft" name in straightforward, lighter type, is intended to "signal the heritage but also signal the future — a newness and freshness," said Jeff Hansen, Microsoft's general manager of brand strategy.

    It's coming at a time when the company is preparing to launch new or significantly updated versions of nearly every one of its products, from Windows to Windows Phone to Office.

    Many of those products will feature a new look and feel — cleaner, with fewer borders and less clutter, and more colorful tile-based designs.

    Given all that, "we felt it was a good time to express the newness in the Microsoft logo as well," Hansen said.

    The new logo features the name "Microsoft" in the Segoe font — a font Microsoft owns and has used in its products and marketing for several years. The font also figures prominently in the new Windows 8 user interface.

    The "f" and "t" in the name "Microsoft" are connected in the new logo, just as they were in the old. "It was one of the subtleties we thought we could bring forward," Hansen said.

    For the first time, the company's logo will also include a symbol: In this case, a square formed by four multicolored square tiles — reminiscent of the company's multihued Windows logo in years past. (Ironically, Windows 8's new logo is now single-colored.)

    The colors in the squares — blue, orange, green and yellow — are those long associated with Microsoft and from which the company's product brands draw.

    The colors are also meant to convey "the diversity of our products and the diversity of people that we serve," Hansen said.

    The new logo also bears great resemblance to, and is an evolution of, the Microsoft Store logo, which was inspired by the Windows flag.

    A lot is at stake when a company changes its logo.

    A logo is the instant communication of a brand, said Barbara Kahn, professor of marketing at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. "It's what is seen time and time again," she said.

    A strong logo, she said, needs to be "distinctive, clearly identified with the brand and consistently used over time."

    The new logo marks the fifth time Redmond-based Microsoft has changed it since the company was founded in 1975 and only the second time since Microsoft went public in 1986.
    Continued...
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  • lxskllr
    Member
    • Sep 2007
    • 13435

    #2
    It's ok, but this one is better :^P

    Comment

    • Crow
      Member
      • Oct 2010
      • 4312

      #3
      Originally posted by lxskllr
      It's ok, but this one is better :^P
      Wiseass.

      I will say that Debian is a good Linux distribution. One of my favorite distributions (next to Red Hat)
      Words of Wisdom

      Premium Parrots: only if the carpet matches the drapes.
      Crow: Of course, that's a given.
      Crow: Imagine a jet black 'raven' with a red bush?
      Crow: Hmm... You know, that actually sounds intriguing to me.
      Premium Parrots: sounds like a freak to me
      Premium Parrots: remember DO NOT TURN YOUR BACK ON CROW
      Premium Parrots: not that it would hurt one bit if he nailed you with his little pecker.
      Frosted: lucky twat
      Frosted: Aussie slags
      Frosted: Mind the STDs Crow

      Comment

      • pris

        #4
        I bet Bill Gates hates Linux ;-) lol

        Comment

        • Crow
          Member
          • Oct 2010
          • 4312

          #5
          Originally posted by pris
          I bet Bill Gates hates Linux ;-) lol
          Words of Wisdom

          Premium Parrots: only if the carpet matches the drapes.
          Crow: Of course, that's a given.
          Crow: Imagine a jet black 'raven' with a red bush?
          Crow: Hmm... You know, that actually sounds intriguing to me.
          Premium Parrots: sounds like a freak to me
          Premium Parrots: remember DO NOT TURN YOUR BACK ON CROW
          Premium Parrots: not that it would hurt one bit if he nailed you with his little pecker.
          Frosted: lucky twat
          Frosted: Aussie slags
          Frosted: Mind the STDs Crow

          Comment

          • pris

            #6
            Funny, I always found Linux or it's big brother UNIX much more reliable than Windows in my Support days and yet Windows was always more popular. Tie in companies have to spend a fortune on Windows licenses and I never got it bearing in mind Linux distros are free. Assumed Windows hung on for app compatibility issues. I mean the latest Ubuntu distro comes even with it's own free MS Office compatible apps......

            Comment

            • CoderGuy
              Member
              • Jul 2009
              • 2679

              #7
              They are really embracing that block/tile look now <sigh>

              I almost dumped Windows until Windows 7 came out. I actually love Windows 7. Not a huge fan of 8 though, mainly because I don't see the point of the "metro" screen on a desktop or non-touch device.

              Comment

              • Crow
                Member
                • Oct 2010
                • 4312

                #8
                New Microsoft Office Logo



                Windows 8 Logo

                Words of Wisdom

                Premium Parrots: only if the carpet matches the drapes.
                Crow: Of course, that's a given.
                Crow: Imagine a jet black 'raven' with a red bush?
                Crow: Hmm... You know, that actually sounds intriguing to me.
                Premium Parrots: sounds like a freak to me
                Premium Parrots: remember DO NOT TURN YOUR BACK ON CROW
                Premium Parrots: not that it would hurt one bit if he nailed you with his little pecker.
                Frosted: lucky twat
                Frosted: Aussie slags
                Frosted: Mind the STDs Crow

                Comment

                • lxskllr
                  Member
                  • Sep 2007
                  • 13435

                  #9
                  Originally posted by pris
                  Funny, I always found Linux or it's big brother UNIX much more reliable than Windows in my Support days and yet Windows was always more popular. Tie in companies have to spend a fortune on Windows licenses and I never got it bearing in mind Linux distros are free. Assumed Windows hung on for app compatibility issues. I mean the latest Ubuntu distro comes even with it's own free MS Office compatible apps......
                  MS has done a good job of making things superficially easy. They lower the bar to allow common people to do common tasks. *nix raises the bar for common tasks, but it also allows more power and control when you get past the basics. Also, MS did a good job of hooking everyone to their products. They made it easy through subsidies and gifts for young people to run their software. When those young people entered the work force, they were more inclined to stick with the stuff they knew. Add in the rest of the anti-competitive practices that made it easier for people to run their software, and they dominated the industry. I think MS does pretty good work, but they have more market share than they deserve, or would have gotten if all software ran exclusively off it's merits.

                  Comment

                  • CoderGuy
                    Member
                    • Jul 2009
                    • 2679

                    #10
                    Originally posted by lxskllr
                    MS has done a good job of making things superficially easy. They lower the bar to allow common people to do common tasks. *nix raises the bar for common tasks, but it also allows more power and control when you get past the basics. Also, MS did a good job of hooking everyone to their products. They made it easy through subsidies and gifts for young people to run their software. When those young people entered the work force, they were more inclined to stick with the stuff they knew. Add in the rest of the anti-competitive practices that made it easier for people to run their software, and they dominated the industry. I think MS does pretty good work, but they have more market share than they deserve, or would have gotten if all software ran exclusively off it's merits.
                    Well you have to think back to the beginning. Apple wouldn't license their OS and their computers were hella expensive. People started selling cheap IBM clones and Windows would run on them. Then they licensed Windows to all the manufacturers, so every time you bought a PC, it came with Windows. Deserved or not, they made their market share, and Apple helped.

                    Speaking of Apple, just saw this breaking news: http://techcrunch.com/2012/08/24/app...ung-infringes/

                    Comment

                    • lxskllr
                      Member
                      • Sep 2007
                      • 13435

                      #11
                      Originally posted by CoderGuy
                      Then they licensed Windows to all the manufacturers, so every time you bought a PC, it came with Windows. Deserved or not, they made their market share, and Apple helped.
                      They also penalized makers for selling computers that /didn't/ have their software. You could sell Windows, and get a sweet discount on the licenses, or you could offer multiple O/Ss at a higher cost. There's a thousand small ways they gained traction, and I would be hard pressed to identify any single one that made MS successful. It definitely wasn't solely merit based success though.

                      Comment

                      • CoderGuy
                        Member
                        • Jul 2009
                        • 2679

                        #12
                        Originally posted by lxskllr
                        They also penalized makers for selling computers that /didn't/ have their software. You could sell Windows, and get a sweet discount on the licenses, or you could offer multiple O/Ss at a higher cost. There's a thousand small ways they gained traction, and I would be hard pressed to identify any single one that made MS successful. It definitely wasn't solely merit based success though.
                        Agreed. At least now that Gates is gone they are finally getting the message about open source. Maybe there is hope for them yet.

                        Comment

                        • Snusdog
                          Member
                          • Jun 2008
                          • 6752

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Crow


                          Windows 8 Logo



                          Is it me or does this new logo seem rather drab and uninspiring

                          Simple is always good (think the pyramids as an enduring and iconic form)………..but boring is quite another……………..
                          When it's my time to go, I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my uncle did....... Not screaming in terror like his passengers

                          Comment

                          • lxskllr
                            Member
                            • Sep 2007
                            • 13435

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Snusdog
                            Is it me or does this new logo seem rather drab and uninspiring

                            Simple is always good (think the pyramids as an enduring and iconic form)………..but boring is quite another……………..
                            I agree. It looks like a logo you'd see on the side of a box for some commodity hardware you don't really give a shit about. A generic logo for a generic product that will be forgotten as soon as the box is recycled. There's a societal trend towards hyperminimalism, and I'm not really feeling it. Scandinavians and Japanese pull it off well, but the rest comes off as uninspired imo.

                            Comment

                            • Premium Parrots
                              Super Moderators
                              • Feb 2008
                              • 9759

                              #15
                              I would much prefer this windows logo








                              Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to hide the bodies of the people I killed because they were annoying......





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