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Sun Microsystems logo: the most beautiful logo design (objectively)

74 points| wis | 1 year ago |commons.wikimedia.org

54 comments

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crmd|1 year ago

Silicon Graphics is my favorite logo from this era, but Sun is solid. I have great memories of being assigned my very own Ultra 2 desktop with Creator3D graphics on the first day of my first tech job.

masfoobar|1 year ago

> Silicon Graphics is my favorite logo from this era...

Agreed. The 3D-pipe cube was beautiful. I believe they changed this logo to a simple "sgi" one by year 2000.

tbh, if the company still existed today, with the 3d-pipe logo, I would still class it my favourite logo. :-)

I really wanted one of their machines back in the day.. being a teenager. Of course, you need to money for one. How times changed when 3d cards came along, giving us SGI-powered-like machines for a fraction of the price.

sgt|1 year ago

My favorite logos of computer companies of that era:

1. NeXT Computer

2. Sun Microsystems

3. Silicon Graphics (SGI) - the silver metallic one

4. Digital (DEC)

5. Norsk Data (with all those cute dots)

6. HP maybe ?

Not sure about the rest.

Any thoughts on other great logos of the era?

oldnetguy|1 year ago

SGI had the best computers back then in my opinion. They were ahead of their time.

ortusdux|1 year ago

I've always been fond of Taiwan's recycling symbol

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Recycle_symbol_Taiwan.s...

idiotsecant|1 year ago

Yes, this is the kind of logo that will last for a thousand years. Really gives a sense of spaciousness, I feel like I can really stretch my elbows in this logo.

feoren|1 year ago

It's pretty, but it doesn't look cyclic to me. It looks like "throw everything in this pit in the middle, where nothing can leave." The "cycle" part is important in recycling! I actually prefer the U.S. recycling logo.

gklitz|1 year ago

Ok, with that one there’s definately a swastika and it’s not even slightly hidden.

saithound|1 year ago

Ugh, a seamless combination of a swastika with an arrow cross. I don't think this would go well in Europe.

(It's not just me. The page has a legal disclaimer:

"This image shows (or resembles) a symbol that was used by the National Socialist (NSDAP/Nazi) government of Germany or an organization closely associated to it, or another party which has been banned by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany." )

apercu|1 year ago

I think it's an objectively "clever" logo but not necessarily objectively "beautiful" one. Does that make sense?

passwordoops|1 year ago

I think you just introduced subjectivity to the conversation

wesamco|1 year ago

I just realized that the PNG file for the logo hosted on wikimedia, is 232KB! That is a lot, that's unnecessarily large for such a simple logo, so I used vtracer, a raster image to SVG vectorizer, written in Rust, and SVGO, a SVG optimizer, to create the SVG file version of the logo, it is 16KB. a 93.1% improvement in size! (and they look the same)

The 2 commands used:

  > wget 'https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d5/SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png'
  --2024-05-14 17:33:31--  https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d5/SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png
  Loaded CA certificate '/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt'
  Resolving upload.wikimedia.org (upload.wikimedia.org)... 185.15.59.240, 2a02:ec80:300:ed1a::2:b
  Connecting to upload.wikimedia.org (upload.wikimedia.org)|185.15.59.240|:443... connected.
  HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
  Length: 237484 (232K) [image/png]
  Saving to: ‘SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png’
  
  SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigr 100%[=============================================>] 231.92K   821KB/s    in 0.3s
  
  2024-05-14 17:33:32 (821 KB/s) - ‘SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png’ saved [237484/237484]
  
  > vtracer --input SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png --output SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png.svg
  Conversion successful.
  > svgo --precision 1 -o SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png-opt2.svg -i SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png.svg
  Done in 73 ms!
  63.162 KiB - 76% = 15.148 KiB
  >  ls -lah
  total 114M
  drwxr-xr-x 2 wis wis 4.0K May 14 17:34 .
  drwxr-xr-x 4 wis wis 4.0K May 14 17:29 ..
  -rw-r--r-- 1 wis wis 232K Jan 12  2019 SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png
  -rw-r--r-- 1 wis wis  16K May 14 17:34 SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png-opt2.svg
  -rw-r--r-- 1 wis wis  64K May 14 17:33 SUN_microsystems_logo_ambigram.png.svg

Makes you think how much the Wikimedia Foundation can improve the loading experience for users and save in bandwidth costs, if they optimize all the PNG raster images that can/should be optimized, which this file is a prime example of.

npteljes|1 year ago

I think it's up to the users themselves, who sometimes also write bots like this. I have encountered a lot of such effort when clicking on an image, especially on the more popular ones. As an example, check this out: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tux.svg

jph|1 year ago

It's even better when you see the logo is made of 8 switches. In other words, 8 bits that make a byte. I'm a former Sun employee and loved that logo so much.

maxkonrad|1 year ago

You should check out the Turkish Airlines logo (THY is the abbreviation for Turkish Airlines in Turkish)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_Airlines.

If you look at it from different angles, you can see "Thy" and, at the same time, a flying wild goose, symbolizing the airline's ability to cover long distances and soar high above.

wesamco|1 year ago

The logo SUN Microsystems had is a 4-way ambigram with rotational symmetries. Designed by Professor Vaughan Pratt of Stanford, the logo features 4 interleaved copies of the word "sun", forming a rotationally symmetric ambigram, with the letters U and N in each word forming the letter S for the next word. You can read the word "sun" if you rotate your head by 45°, 135°, 225°, or 315°.

* Objectively according to me. :P

cosmotic|1 year ago

Wow, now that you pointed it out, I just saw the "un" part of that. Until now, I just thought it was four 'S's.

mindcrime|1 year ago

It is nice, unless you stare at it too long - in which case you might suddenly find yourself gibbering madly, staring at the walls, and chanting Iä! Iä! Cthulhu fhtagn! Ph'nglui mglw'nfah Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn! Iä! Iä! Iä! Iä! over and over again...

alt0_|1 year ago

I didn't get the reference, but thanks for the heads-up.

echelon_musk|1 year ago

I have a circa 2000 Specialized Hardrock Comp 17" white/blue mountain bike and I always thought it was cool that the aluminum frame was "Designed by Sun Microsystems" complete with this logo.

Lammy|1 year ago

This logo is also technically a swastika in the heraldic sense (four-armed cross, arms bent at 90 degrees, with rotational symmetry).

23B1|1 year ago

Have stared at this logo for far too long, at some terminal in the middle of a too-cold server room, contemplating my life choices.

bitwize|1 year ago

Every time I see someone wearing a Columbia jacket I think "were they once an employee or client of Sun?"

jamesdhutton|1 year ago

And it's a perfect match to Sun's slogan: "The Network is the Computer."

fweimer|1 year ago

Isn't it ”We are the dot in oracle.com” nowadays?

rhelz|1 year ago

Yet one more amazing thing that Dr. Vaughan Pratt invented. Its depressing how big of a gap there is between the top computer scientists and everybody else.

fmajid|1 year ago

I like the Plessey Electronics (UK) logo. Looks like an oscilloscope trace, but when you look closely, it’s like “plessey” in lower case.

gklitz|1 year ago

It looks kinda like there’s a hidden swastika in there but it goes away once you start to look for it.

matrix12|1 year ago

It's also the back side of the Facebook Thumbs up sign.

DrNosferatu|1 year ago

Clever? Most definitely so.

Beautiful? I’ve seen better.

Latrina|1 year ago

I agree. I miss Sun..