Luis Prado has created what he hopes will become the international symbol for global warming. He's one of many designers contributing
icons2 to an online bank of icons called the Noun Project.The creators of the Noun Project think it could one day contain an
icon1 for every noun, which is a tall order.
But we are already surrounded by icons in the modern world.
Pictorial3 instructions appear on everything from instant noodles to emergency exits. And of course, modern computers and smartphones are unthinkable without a screenful of icons.
It's hard to imagine now, but early computers didn't have them. They used 'command line interfaces': lines of written commands
scrolling4 down the screen. The virtual
desktop5 with icons we know today was created by
Xerox6 in the 1970s. They established conventions we still use: a document was symbolised by a blank sheet of paper with one corner folded, a directory was a card
folder7 with a tab on top, a picture of a trash can meant 'delete' and a closed envelope indicated an unread email.
As technology improved, it was possible to move away from the early, simple black and white signs to full colour and more realistic images. But we still love the simple when it comes to icons. All the designs on the Noun Project site are clean black and white line drawings, and there are nostalgic fan sites
dedicated8 to old-school computer icons from the 70s and 80s.
But things are harder for designers today. Modern devices have many functions and require more icons, making it harder to avoid confusion. Take the arrow. It's an old and well-used symbol but in a modern operating system, an arrow can mean drop down menu,
undo9, redo, sort, cursor, play video, change text direction and move to next item - to name just a few uses.
It's clear we need icons more than ever. So what makes a successful one? As well as simple lines and unique shape, an icon needs to be universal, so plays on words don't work well. An early Apple icon of a cat meaning copy (from the English 'copycat') was soon dropped because it was confusing to non-English speakers. But it might be impossible to be truly international. Most computers indicate time passing from left to right, with the past on the left and the future on the right. That's logical for English speakers, but not for people who write right to left like Arabic speakers.