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Tuesday, August 12th, 2008
Self-branding: Your personal favicon
in: Communicate, Standing out
User interfaces are busy things. They’re cluttered with information, and designers have to reduce it down to its minimum to make things work properly. If I’m using chat, or Twitter, I have icons for everyone I interact with. And they’re the closest we get to a personal logo. Consider Twitter: I have only a few pixels to identify people. Many of these are surprisingly memorable: GigaOm, Laughingsquid, and others stand out nicely. The personal icon shows up elsewhere, too. Here’s the icon strip from my chat (names removed to protect the innocent.) And there are “visitor log” tools like Mybloglog. Unfortunately, I’m breaking my own rule: I have different photos for Mybloglog. It’s time for some brand cleanup. Here’s what I’m going to do: Sean called this a Personal Favicon, and I think he’s right. The little 16×16 icon that appears in the address bar is a brand, reduced to its barest of bones. I’m betting that a branded personal icon, particularly in microblogging circles, will become something trademarked and defensible that graphic designers add to their list of design deliverables for a startup. There will be a land grab, too: I’m not going to choose black and green, or blue and white, because those are pretty well known.![]()

View CommentsTuesday, August 12th, 2008
Syntenic turns up a new face
in: Startups
No more. Their new site just launched, and with it a description of several cloud and managed hosting offerings. It’s great to see this kind of technical acumen in a Montreal company; the city is gradually evolving the kind of ecosystem that can support a thriving startup community. Disclaimer: Rednod and Bitcurrent run on Syntenic’s servers. They’re smart enough that I’d risk seeming partisan by writing about them.
Syntenic, long a quiet force behind many websites, has turned up the noise considerably with the launch of their new website and offerings. I’ve known the guys at Syntenic for some time, and they’re a smart bunch (two of the executives contribute to the Bitcurrent technology blog.) But they’ve been too busy running production sites and building cloud computing solutions to toot their own horn.


