Need someone to lead product management at your software company? I create software for people that create software and I'm looking for my next opportunity. Check out my resume and get in touch.

This is the blog of Adam Kalsey. Unusual depth and complexity. Rich, full body with a hint of nutty earthiness.

TechBurnOrati

Freshness Warning
This blog post is over 17 years old. It's possible that the information you read below isn't current and the links no longer work.

When I saw a preview of Technorati’s new WTF feature, the first thing I told Dave Sifry was the logo looked an awful lot like FeedBurner’s.

fb-trati.png

Here’s the flame from each logo with everything else removed and both flames converted to black.

fb-trati-black.png

Separated at birth?

Comments

Phil
February 1, 2007 1:10 PM

Put 10 designers in 10 different rooms. Tell them you want stylized fire for a web 2.0 site icon. Find 2 that look different! I don't think they're stealing.

Andy
February 2, 2007 1:04 AM

Campfire's logo isn't that different either... http://www.campfirenow.com/

Stefan Seiz
February 2, 2007 7:14 AM

A flame is a flame is a flame.

This discussion has been closed.

Recently Written

Micromanaging and competence (Jul 2)
Providing feedback or instruction can be seen as micromanagement unless you provide context.
My productivity operating system (Jun 24)
A framework for super-charging productivity on the things that matter.
Great product managers own the outcomes (May 14)
Being a product manager means never having to say, "that's not my job."
Too Big To Fail (Apr 9)
When a company piles resources on a new product idea, it doesn't have room to fail. That keeps it from succeeding.
Go small (Apr 4)
The strengths of a large organization are the opposite of what makes innovation work. Starting something new requires that you start with a small team.
Start with a Belief (Apr 1)
You can't use data to build products unless you start with a hypothesis.
Mastery doesn’t come from perfect planning (Dec 21)
In a ceramics class, one group focused on a single perfect dish, while another made many with no quality focus. The result? A lesson in the value of practice over perfection.
The Dark Side of Input Metrics (Nov 27)
Using input metrics in the wrong way can cause unexpected behaviors, stifled creativity, and micromanagement.

Older...

What I'm Reading