Microsoft revamps logo for 1st time in 25 years

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Microsoft's corporate logo has a new look, setting the stage for a wave of products designed to cast the world's largest software maker in a new light.
The makeover unveiled Thursday marks the first time that Microsoft Corp. has revamped its logo since February 1987. The Internet was barely around then, and cellphones were considered a luxury.
At the time, Microsoft was putting the finishing touches on the second version of its Windows operating system. Two of Microsoft's biggest nemeses - Google Inc. co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin - were just 13 years old. And Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs was just in the second year of an 11-year exile from the company that went on to invent the iPod, iPhone and iPad after he returned.
By revamping its logo, Microsoft is trying to signal that it has changed its thinking and its products to cater to people who are interacting with technology much differently than just a decade ago, let alone a quarter century.
Now, more computing tasks are being done on touch-based devices such as smartphones and tablets instead of personal computers tethered to keyboards and mice. Many software applications are now supplied over high-speed Internet connections for a monthly fee instead of being installed on individual computers.
Microsoft believes a radical change to Windows will ensure that the company survives the technological upheaval. Windows 8, due to hit the market Oct. 26, displays software applications in a mosaic of tiles and has been engineered so it works on both touch-based tablets and traditional PCs. The company also is releasing its own Windows 8-powered tablet to compete against the iPad, accompanied by a new version of Office applications tailored for such devices. There also will be a Windows 8 operating system for smartphones.
The new logo ushers in "one of the most significant waves of product launches in Microsoft's history," Jeff Hansen, the company's general manager of brand strategy, wrote in a blog post Thursday.
The redesign features the Microsoft name in a lighter, straight font called Segoe to replace the italic bold type used in the old standby. The new logo also includes the familiar red, blue, yellow and green colors used in the flag on Microsoft's Windows operating system, but the colors will be in a square box instead of the curvy template that has been in place for years. Those color boxes invoke the tiles that will be central to Windows 8.
"The ways people experience our products are our most important 'brand impressions,'" Hansen wrote. "That's why the new Microsoft logo takes its inspiration from our product design principles while drawing upon the heritage of our brand values, fonts and colors."
The new logo made its debut Thursday on Microsoft's websites, as well as three of its stores in Boston, Bellevue, Wash. and Seattle, which is located near the company's Redmond, Wash., headquarters.
This is Microsoft's fifth logo since Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded the company 37 years ago. When it last changed its logo in 1987, Microsoft had been a publicly traded company for less than a year and boasted a market value of about $2 billion. It peaked at more than $600 million in 1999. Now, Microsoft's market value stands at $254 billion - less than half of Apple's market value of $623 billion.
The makeover unveiled Thursday marks the first time that Microsoft Corp. has revamped its logo since February 1987. The Internet was barely around then, and cellphones were considered a luxury.
At the time, Microsoft was putting the finishing touches on the second version of its Windows operating system. Two of Microsoft's biggest nemeses - Google Inc. co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin - were just 13 years old. And Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs was just in the second year of an 11-year exile from the company that went on to invent the iPod, iPhone and iPad after he returned.
By revamping its logo, Microsoft is trying to signal that it has changed its thinking and its products to cater to people who are interacting with technology much differently than just a decade ago, let alone a quarter century.
Now, more computing tasks are being done on touch-based devices such as smartphones and tablets instead of personal computers tethered to keyboards and mice. Many software applications are now supplied over high-speed Internet connections for a monthly fee instead of being installed on individual computers.
Microsoft believes a radical change to Windows will ensure that the company survives the technological upheaval. Windows 8, due to hit the market Oct. 26, displays software applications in a mosaic of tiles and has been engineered so it works on both touch-based tablets and traditional PCs. The company also is releasing its own Windows 8-powered tablet to compete against the iPad, accompanied by a new version of Office applications tailored for such devices. There also will be a Windows 8 operating system for smartphones.
The new logo ushers in "one of the most significant waves of product launches in Microsoft's history," Jeff Hansen, the company's general manager of brand strategy, wrote in a blog post Thursday.
The redesign features the Microsoft name in a lighter, straight font called Segoe to replace the italic bold type used in the old standby. The new logo also includes the familiar red, blue, yellow and green colors used in the flag on Microsoft's Windows operating system, but the colors will be in a square box instead of the curvy template that has been in place for years. Those color boxes invoke the tiles that will be central to Windows 8.
"The ways people experience our products are our most important 'brand impressions,'" Hansen wrote. "That's why the new Microsoft logo takes its inspiration from our product design principles while drawing upon the heritage of our brand values, fonts and colors."
The new logo made its debut Thursday on Microsoft's websites, as well as three of its stores in Boston, Bellevue, Wash. and Seattle, which is located near the company's Redmond, Wash., headquarters.
This is Microsoft's fifth logo since Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded the company 37 years ago. When it last changed its logo in 1987, Microsoft had been a publicly traded company for less than a year and boasted a market value of about $2 billion. It peaked at more than $600 million in 1999. Now, Microsoft's market value stands at $254 billion - less than half of Apple's market value of $623 billion.
Be interesting to know what they paid someone to come up with that. Doubt that it was in house.
What do they think changing the logo will make the crap they dump out better or make us forget that money comes first and SCREW the customer?
Fix the software don't worry about the logo!
(typed from an Ubuntu machine. Â Wooot!)
:-)
Bland and uninteresting.
Â
It's a perfect fit.Â
Should have just used a solid blue screen. At least people would instantly recognize the logo.Â
It's basically the logo they're already using for the Microsoft Stores slightly simplified. Can't say I have an opinion one way or the other, but I've seen worse.
Cut and paste. Fine-tune the colors. Done. (I am sorry but a let down after all the hype.)
It should be Micro$oft.Â
Â
I would bet that months of research and effort went into this. And this is the result?
 @Veteran Insert the standard response to use of the term "M$" here:
http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2002/07/22
I'm pretty sure this logo would show up on "Almost Live's" lame list. Â That's the best they could do?
 @stamperzann If only Almost Live! were still on the air...Â
Â
back in time before there were computers. I used to draw logos by hand for money, if I would have came up with this logo I would have been laughed at.
Square is square what else is new?
Yeah, revamp the logo. That's gonna help.
Good Lord.
I wonder if they have considered hiring a designer?
I'll bet money they change it again. This is a logo? Balmer is an ass to approve this. But then again we have Vista, Zune and a whole host of FAILURES. This will be another one.
Is this the new logo or the old? Sorry, I don't recall in my mind.  Nice font though. Remember the Microsoft Bob OS?  One of the biggest flops of all time.  It's only legacy... the Comic Sans font was created for it, but ironically not released with it.  Now why do I remember that?
It's always disappointing when companies try so hard to burn a brand and establish it. Only to revise it once everyone immediately identifies it. This logo is utterly generic looking, someone's head should be on a platter for this baby.
Lame, like Windows 8!
ick
Wow, such a major leap into the future. It really speaks "the new Microsoft" better than anything else.
/sarc
Â
A truly boring design.Â
I don't like it, it doesn't speak to me.
Wow what an innovative design. And to think people think Microsoft can't innovate an just copy.
 @TheLogicOne you forgot the /sarc tag.
Looks good to me. New and clean and you don't need to look twice to know exactly which company it represents.
Excellent job.
How bland. I don't think it's an improvement.
first time to revamp and this is what they come up with?
 @makeadifference It makes one wonder how much they paid the 6th grade art student for the design...
The flags logo showed the international scope of the company....this is just plain a bad revamp.
I hope they redesigned the paper-clip helper too. I've always thought he would look fetching in a fancy hat.
Clippy is long dead. http://blogs.office.com/b/office_blog/archive/2007/01/30/yes-clippy-is-dead.aspx
if in doubt, design a new logo!
Windows 8 is supposed to be about unifying all the platforms (phone, PC, tablet) under a single user interface, yet the logo is four distinct colors that don't connect to each other. I don't think this tile concept (like the logo is supposed to be based on) will catch on like they hope.