Kategorien
Übersicht der verschiedenen Logos von Commodore und Amiga.
This is a logo owned by Commodore-Amiga Inc. for Amiga. It is a historical logo. Its historical usage is as follows: Discontinued in the late 1980s. Further details: Amiga „tick“ logo (1985).
Typeface: ITC Garamond Bold Italic
Source: SVG reconstruction of the logo retrieved from the Amiga Basic Manual
Alle Symbole und Fonts sind nur für den privaten und persönlichen Gebrauch! Und alle Zeichen und Schriften sind und bleiben urheberrechtlich geschützt, auch wenn man sie für sich selbst nachbildet! |
The name Amiga was chosen by the developers from the Spanish word for a female friend, because they knew Spanish, and because it occurred before Apple and Atari alphabetically. It also conveyed the message that the Amiga computer line was „user friendly“ as a pun or play on words.
The first official Amiga logo was a rainbow-colored double check mark. In later marketing material Commodore largely dropped the checkmark and used logos styled with various typefaces. Though it was never adopted as a trademark by Commodore, the „Boing Ball“ has been synonymous with Amiga since its launch. It became an unofficial and enduring theme after a visually impressive animated demonstration at the 1984 Winter Consumer Electronics Show in January 1984 showing a checkered ball bouncing and rotating. Following Escom's purchase of Commodore in 1996, the Boing Ball theme was incorporated into a new logo.
Early Commodore advertisements attempted to cast the computer as an all-purpose business machine, though the Amiga was most commercially successful as a home computer. Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s Commodore primarily placed advertising in computer magazines and occasionally in national newspapers and on television.
from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiga#Marketing