by [anonymous]
1 min read26th Jul 20115 comments

20

(Motivated by this comment.)

The Singularity Institute's new logo, chosen from a competition, doesn't seem to be publicly available in SVG format.  But presumably, the winner delivered an SVG (or another vector format) instead of a JPEG.  The vector form should be made publicly available, like how Wikipedia's logo is available as an SVG here.

To start with, this could be used to improve the Singularity Institute page on Wikipedia, which is in dire need of a logo.

(I actually have no personal use for this, I'm simply a connoisseur of high-quality logos.)

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[-]Nisan13y110

While we're at it, is there a publicly available SVG of the Less Wrong logo? Or at least a high-resolution image? It would be useful for publicity and outreach.

There is no SVG. I've posted a publicly accessible copy of the largest JPG available.

The background strands pass over the foreground strands. Is that intentional?

[-][anonymous]13y10

Louie: Thanks. There are people who can vectorize images; the larger JPEG will make that easier.

Incorrect: You are correct, that's clearly an error - nice catch!

thanks, inverted and resized it for wallpaper because I hate white backgrounds. Link if anyone wants it.

http://i.imgur.com/ja7yQ.png