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Thread: Who came up with the computer symbols?

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    Who came up with the computer symbols?

    Who Came Up With Computer Symbols? - ktla.com


    Since computers came into our lives, we really didn't ask questions about how they got here or the process of naming the keys and symbols. But aren't you curious about where the names and symbols came from?


    The Power Button
    Back in the 1940s, WWII engineers used the binary system to label individual power buttons, toggles and rotary switches: a 1 meant "on," and a 0 meant off. In 1973, the International Electrotechnical Commission vaguely codified a broken circle with a line inside it as "standby power state," and sticks to that story even now. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, however, decided that was too vague, and altered the definition to simply mean power.


    The "At" Symbol
    It has been known by many names: the snail (France and Italy), the little mouse (China), the monkey's tail (Germany). In 1971, a Bolt, Beranek & Newman programmer Raymond Tomlinson decided to insert the symbol between computer network addresses to separate the user from the terminal. Prior to Tomlinson's use, the @ also graced the keyboard of the American Underwood in 1885 as an accounting shorthand symbol meaning "at the rate of." Some also suggest that @ has its origins in the sixth century, when monks adopted it as a better way of wirting the word ad-Latin for "at" or "toward"-that was not so easily confused with AD, the designation for Anno Domini, or the the years after the death of Christ.


    USB
    Created as part of the USB 1.0 spec, the USB icon was drawn to resemble Neptune's Trident, the mighty Dreizack. In lieu of the pointed triangles at the tip of the three-pronged spear, the USB Promoters decided to alter the shapes to a triangle, square and circle. This was done to signify all the different peripherals that could be attached using the standard.


    Firewire
    Back in 1995, a small group at Apple, the main developer of FireWire, set about designing a symbol that could accurately reflect the new technology they were working on. Originally intended as serial alternative to SCSI, FireWire's main allure was that it promised high-speed connectivity for digital audio and video equipment. So designers opted for a symbol with three prongs, representing video, audio and data. Initially, the symbol was red, but was later altered to yellow for unknown reasons.


    Apple's Command Symbol
    While working with other team members to translate menu commands directly to the keyboard, Hertzfeld and his team decided to add a special function key. The idea was simple: When pressed in combination with other keys, this "Apple key" would select the corresponding menu command. Jobs hated it-or more precisely the symbol used to represent the button-which was yet another picture of the Apple logo. Hertzfeld recalls his reaction: "There are too many Apples on the screen! It's ridiculous! We're taking the Apple logo in vain!" A hasty redesign followed, in which bitmap artist Susan Kare poured through in international symbol dictionary and settled on one floral symbol that in Sweden, indicated a noteworthy attraction in a campground. Alternately known as the Gorgon loop, the splat, the infinite loop, and, in the Unicode standard, a "place of interest sign," the command symbol has remained a mainstay on Apple keyboards to this day.


    Bluetooth
    The Bluetooth symbol is actually a combination of the two runes that represent Harald's initials. It just so happens the first Bluetooth receptor also had a "teeth-like" shape, and was-you guessed it-blue. But the symbolic interplay doesn't end there. As the Bluetooth SIG notes, Bl??tand "was instrumental in uniting warring factions in parts of what are now Norway, Sweden, and Denmark - just as Bluetooth technology is designed to allow collaboration between differing industries such as the computing, mobile phone, and automotive markets."
    Last edited by Resurrection; 01.12.10 at 03:35.
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  2. Who Said Thanks:

    alpacino (01.12.10) , anonftw (01.12.10) , cheatos (01.12.10) , Instab (01.12.10) , slikrapid (30.11.10) , caballero (30.11.10) , ParamouR (30.11.10) , C3PO (30.11.10) , anon (30.11.10) , hessler (30.11.10)

  3. #2
    Moderator anon's Avatar
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    Thanks, I only knew the Bluetooth one.
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    The Power Button
    looks like a design that simultaneously represents a combination of '1' & '0' but also very much resembles a union of male & female sexual organs (ie. masculinity & femininity)

    Some also suggest that @ has its origins in the sixth century, when monks adopted it as a better way of wirting the word ad-Latin for "at" or "toward"-that was not so easily confused with AD, the designation for Anno Domini, or the the years after the death of Christ.
    nonsense, just imagine monks being careless with transcription (they were doing it with an almost fanatical devotion/dedication), or using some arbitrary shortened symbols for words (even more unbelievable for a two letter word) - the wiki explanation connected to commercial usage is more plausible

    also its birth, not death


    the USB icon was drawn to resemble Neptune's Trident, the mighty Dreizack...the USB Promoters decided to alter the shapes
    they changed it because it was too obvious, as trident is a symbol of maritime dominion, a militant one (Dreizack=yiddish? )

    Apple's Command Symbol
    A hasty redesign followed, in which bitmap artist Susan Kare poured through in international symbol dictionary and settled on one floral symbol that in Sweden, indicated a noteworthy attraction in a campground. Alternately known as the Gorgon loop, the splat, the infinite loop, and, in the Unicode standard, a "place of interest sign,"
    hasty? only to naive casual readers - all of these symbols and logos have been very carefully designed which can be observed when comparing them to ancient symbols with occult purposes/significance, this applies to the majority of today's large companies, though they tend to avoid mentioning it and try to relativize/distract it with some silly excuses or comparisons

    they 'forgot' to mention how it is also called Saint John's Arms (the baptist) or Bowen Knot used in heraldry and found on ancient stone images

    It just so happens the first Bluetooth receptor also had a "teeth-like" shape
    and it just so happens they used runes for their logo, that happens to resemble a combination of the sun/sun rays & pyramids
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  5. #4
    Ah a slik's post...

    The thread is now complete.
    Its like adding salt to food.Its just not same without it...

    A little bit of conspiracy theory,a little male-female gender bias,a little philosophy,a little "birth and death" and little bit of crazy...
    All is right in the world....

    ---------- Post added at 04:42 ---------- Previous post was at 04:38 ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    Thanks, I only knew the Bluetooth one.
    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    Please use the thanks button next time


    ---------- Post added at 04:50 ---------- Previous post was at 04:42 ----------

    Added images to the first post...

    For posterity....
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  6. Who Said Thanks:

    Instab (01.12.10)

  7. #5
    Moderator anon's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Resurrection View Post
    I make the rules.

    I also clicked the Thanks button in your post, and come on, this is the chill & fun section.
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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