I really like the minimalist nature of the "[ | ]" logo for Smalltalk,
kind of similar to the lambdas (λ) from Lisp families and is
cross-dialect and, as Esteban says, unique.
Cheers,
Offray
On 02/05/17 09:01, Esteban A. Maringolo wrote:
A decade+ ago I created the one attached, and I've seen used in some
Smalltalk related sites. I still like it but it can be done better.
I don't like the balloon, it's an indirect reference to the Byte cover
which hasn't much to do with Smalltalk directly; as Pascal triangles
didn't have much to do with Pascal [1] the programming language.
I think we can play a little more with the brackets which are
something kind of unique to Smalltalk syntax.
OTOH we have Pharo logo which is nice and unambiguous.
Regards,
[1] A prevoius cover of Byte Magazine shown Pascal triangles in a
choppy sea, an you could see what later would be the Smalltalk island,
isolated in an "ivory tower" way of looking at the world, and escaping
from the sea problem by avoiding it completely, hence the balloon.
http://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/157035900745/pascals-triangle-a-1978-byte-cover-by-robert
Esteban A. Maringolo
2017-05-02 9:06 GMT-03:00 Thierry Goubier <thierry.goub...@gmail.com>:
2017-05-02 13:19 GMT+02:00 horrido <horrido.hobb...@gmail.com>:
Thanks. The reason I think it's a problem is because I tried to use this
logo
in the Wikipedia Smalltalk article, but the Wikipedia overlords kept
rejecting it, telling me that it wasn't an "official" logo and thus
Wikipedia would not accept it. What makes a logo "official?" Why are all
the
other language logos in my article (which I gleaned from Wikipedia) any
more
"official?"
Interesting angle for the problem (didn't think of that one).
My analysis as I would review. The common agreed logo for smalltalk is a
rendering of the Byte cover, this makes it the 'official' logo. Your's
hasn't reached the level of agreement / support necessary to reach that
level. And Wikipedia isn't the place where this change is to be decided:
wikipedia will follow the will of the overall community.
Other logos are either endorsed by the community or used by the master site
for the language: for example, the Caml logo, the Clojure logo, both appeara
on the 'official' website for the language. For Caml, many alternatives
logos exist, but none of the alternatives appear on the wikipedia page.
Now, changing a logo requires overcoming some friction(*)... writing around
Smalltalk and allways tagging with it could be a way to make it popular and
displace the old one. Your target would be reached once Wikipedia accept
yours, and that may require ESUG to decide to switch, and so on.
Regards,
Thierry
Thierry Goubier wrote
Hi Richard,
2017-05-02 12:57 GMT+02:00 horrido <
horrido.hobbies@
>:
I have A Logo Proposal for Smalltalk
<https://medium.com/@richardeng/a-logo-proposal-for-smalltalk-e78180f3ec02
> >
I like it.
. But there is one huge (insurmountable?) obstacle.
If you refer to a standard 'org' that would force the use / change of a
logo, then I see no obstacle. I like it that the multiple shapes
Smalltalk
has have left space for creativity and freedom.
If your logo is nice and creative enough, and that it can be freely
used,
then it will raise through the community and replace / displace the old
one.
Regards,
Thierry
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