makeitdouble 2 days ago

The small eyes version is freaky for such a logo. With Big eyes it looks friendlier, but still not cute...

For something neutral and scalable, having a side perspective could perhaps work better ? Like this one for instance, with very few lines yet looks good.

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRMINEP...

  • Tade0 2 days ago

    Yeah, the front perspective evokes associations with a predator locked on its prey.

    • latexr 2 days ago

      The Small Eyes + Standing + GNU Chimera version is straight up a demon doll which could feature in the Twilight Zone.

    • washadjeffmad 2 days ago

      Yet its expressionlessness captures the lobotomized drone-like corporate flair that characterizes mainstream Linux today.

      I'm not against it as long as we don't erase Tux from older projects.

  • InsideOutSanta 2 days ago

    I had the exact same thought. I wish the eyes were bigger, it looks scary.

  • whywhywhywhy 2 days ago

    the way the big eyes are drawn it looks scared, the way the small eyes are drawn it looks sinister

donatj 2 days ago

I feel bad to be this critical but it fails in direct, context free recognizability.

It fails to evoke "penguin".

I wouldn't have recognized it as a penguin without context, and I doubt others would without priming.

  • xg15 2 days ago

    I think it would work quite well in an icon/emoji setting, where the context "operation system brand" was already established.

    E.g. think of some "coose your OS" widget with entries:

      - (Apple with bite) MacOS
      - (Colored flag) Windows
      - (This icon) Linux
    • lotu 2 days ago

      I disagree while, there is an Linux icon that would fit in here. This is not it. It might be a starting point, I don't think the design works. despite how simple the windows and apple logos they represent thousands of hours of work by the best graphic artists.

      I'm not one of the best graphic artists but I'll give it a shot. First the default version feels vaguely ominous. To me it feels like someone robbing a bank or the logo on stormtroopers murdering civilians, this is obviously horrible. I think this is due to the sharp angles and the eyes without an attached mouth.

      The other options improve the scary problem but add complexity that moves it away from the simple universal recognizable logo we are trying to make. On that note the default version is still too complex. Maybe you could move to more of a silhouette, though I think that would fail in recognizably.

      Perhaps part of the problem is a penguin is just not so omnipresent in our lives as windows and apples are. Redhat does achieve this with a very simple instantly recognizable logo, I think that could work. Ubuntu also does well with it's logo thought it has gone full abstract, it's distinct and works well.

      If you want to see more google image search for "logos"

    • numpad0 2 days ago

      You want a dev to fill in that third set of bracket with "A penguin", and it didn't happen.

  • card_zero 2 days ago

    Tux evokes "earless chimpanzee with duck feet" for me, anyway.

    Or swimming fins maybe since they're enormous.

  • petepete 2 days ago

    My first thought was a Russian doll.

  • msgilligan 2 days ago

    The "seated" option adds the feet and helps make it more recognizable.

  • hidroto 2 days ago

    looks like a bottle top opener to me, in fact i think it would work just fine as one.

scosman 2 days ago

This is great. I made a download button a while ago. The Apple and Windows logos scale down, look great, and are easily identifiable. Tux is great, but just doesn't scale down. Tried about 10 variants to get one that is recognizable, but also works at smaller sizes.

Many attempts at this from many people: https://www.svgrepo.com/vectors/linux/

  • riedel 2 days ago

    I failed the 'vercel security check point' with my browser. It sucks if you only can browse the web with chrome based browsers..

    • esseph 2 days ago

      Just tried from Firefox and can confirm, it blocks the page load.

      • jasonm23 2 days ago

        FYI using FF Nightly, no issues.

    • hulitu a day ago

      It is for your security. Next they will implement age verification. Linux is not for children. /s

  • throawayonthe 2 days ago

    i've seen people use emojis and i think it makes sense: just use an apple, window, and penguin emoji, and the platform will usually display something reasonable at ~all scales

diego_moita 2 days ago

Comparing this logo to the original reminds me the whole discussion about skeuomorphism (that's when GUI icons imitate closely things from the real world).

Icons that strongly resemble things from real life are, quite often, problematic at representation, especially in smaller sizes. They take more time to understand and decode, they're prone to confusion.

But anti-skeuomorphic icons also have a problem of their own: they become so abstract that quite often we don't know what they represent. They become cold and soulless, like corporation logos. An example: I look at this new icon and what I see is Darth Vader with an open big mouth.

It is like comparing IKEA furniture and Bauhaus or Scandinavian design against Art-Noveau or Antonio Gaudí's architecture. The first are (as Nietzsche would say) apolinean, elegant, subdued and functional. The second are dionisiac, fun, a feast for the senses.

  • moron4hire 2 days ago

    Skeumorphism isn't just resembling things from the real world. It's using simulated physical object styling and detail in a user interface to signify affordances in the design.

    A penguin icon is not a skeumorphism because it being a penguin doesn't tell us anything about how to use the icon.

    If the icon were a rendering of a physical push-button, then it would be skeumorphic, because the button image would suggest to us that we can click it.

    Unless you're trying to make the argument that penguins deserve boops on their beaks.

    • diego_moita 2 days ago

      I am not sure the term is so strict and applies only to "controls" in GUIs.

      Case in point: the Wikipedia page on skeuomorphism refers to objects outside of the domain of GUI language. It also covers physical objects referencing other physical objects (e.g.: skeuomorphic pottery, wood architecture imitating stone, plastic objects imitating metal, etc.)

      • moron4hire 2 days ago

        Yes, but we're talking about digital interfaces right now.

        Even when considering faux finishes on real world materials, that standard doesn't apply here. Unlike, say, the wooden shingles cut to look like stone on Colonial era architecture (e.g. George Washington's home at Mt. Vernon) that are trying to convince us they are something they aren't, the penguin icon is not trying to, nor would it ever, convince us it's a real penguin.

        Going back to my first sentence, yes, skeuomorphism is a concept older than computer interfaces. When the term is applied to computer interfaces, it has to be adapted. Since current display tech could never create something even close to a convincing simulacrum of, say, a notebook, the term then gets adapted to mean that the use of skeuomorphism attempts to communicate functionally. Much like how "brutalist" Web design has nothing to do with the Brutalist architecture movement.

  • numpad0 2 days ago

    I think the word you're looking for is more like avant-garde movement, cubism, surrealism, communist constructivism, post-modern deconstructivism, postmodernism, or something towards that rough general direction towards the MoMA and the Guggenheim museum, rather than skeuomorphism/anti-skeuomorphism dichotomy.

xorcist 2 days ago

I thought this would be about the other Linux logo, that preceeded the penguin:

https://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/logos/platypus/llogo.gif

  • lucasoshiro 2 days ago

    Do you have more information about it? By googling "Linux platypus" the only thing that I could find is that exact URL

    • xorcist 2 days ago

      The Tux penguin was suggested as the unofficial logo for the 2.0 release of Linux, which had SMP support and was a big deal. It half-jokingly received Linus' blessing and everyone has used it since.

      It's easy to see why, it is an instant classic, very cute, and works in different situations and at different scales. Larry Ewing who drew the picture, a sysadmin and not a professional illustrator, still has a web page up describing it: https://isc.tamu.edu/~lewing/linux/

      Before that there were many logos but the platypus one was probably the most used. Walnut Creek, who put out CDROMs with shareware and freeware, used to publish the popular Linux distributions too and they needed something for their covers and used it.

      Slackware kept using it for a long time. I believe the idea was that Linux, too, looks like it was put together by disparate parts. Web pages back in 1996 was mostly textual and pictures were used sparingly so the use case was mostly books and CDROM covers. There is a certain cuteness to it and it did look good on T-shirts.

      • jasonm23 2 days ago

        Slackware used J.R. "Bob" Dobbs / Dobbshead from the Church Of The Subgenius as an "unofficial" mascot/logo until the S became it's defacto logo. The Dobbshead still shows up.

    • blu3h4t 2 days ago

      If you google for slackware 96 cd youll find a similar one. :)

teddyh 2 days ago

I was always partial to the Linux logo with the red triangle (from 1994): <https://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/logos/raytraced/linux-povl...>.

(More old Linux logos here: <https://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/logos/!INDEX.html>)

jihadjihad 2 days ago

It looks like a haunted platypus.

  • forinti 2 days ago

    Looks like a bottle opener to me.

_ZeD_ 2 days ago

BTW Tux is the linux mascot, not logo

dale_glass 2 days ago

The other logo is a fox: https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/xenia-linuxfox

Kinda wish that one had won, foxes are cooler looking and more marketable.

  • hagbard_c a day ago

    Foxes are also overused and I consider myself fortunate in not having come across Tux-the-penguin with a 'trans flag' - follow the link if you wonder what I mean - nor do I rue the absence of any furry-like characteristics in the toy penguin. This furry fox seems to be just that, a generic anime-like furry avatar, one out of thousands and as such not memorable.

throwaway2046 2 days ago

It's a nice minimalist design, but I think it still doesn't scale down as well as the Apple and Windows logos. The logo needs to be simple yet more expressive somehow, perhaps only focusing on Tux's head?

mchenier 2 days ago

Don’t fix it if it ain’t broken!

gorgoiler 2 days ago

On the topic of Linux logos, about 20 years ago there was a popular Ethernet <-> USB storage bridge called an NSLU2 aka the “Slug”. It was of a similar pedigree to the classic WRT54g but instead of routing, this device turned cheap USB disks into a NAS device:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSLU2

There was quite an active group of hackers bringing Linux to the platform. This was their utterly heartwarming and adorable logo:

https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale8x/sites/socallinuxexpo....

wateralien 2 days ago

Love the direction. But small eyes looks spooky and big eyes looks terrified.

Melonai 2 days ago

Thought this was about Xenia for a moment... :)

analog8374 2 days ago

It looks like he's wearing a mask

sublinear 2 days ago

Does Linux really have a logo, or just a mascot? Does Linux even need a logo if every distro has one? Do logos even make sense anymore?

paxys 2 days ago

Meh, not for me. It's like someone saw the iconic Linux logo and said "what if this was done by an overfunded pre-revenue Silicon Valley startup instead".

Aldipower 2 days ago

I am sorry to say this, but this one looks soulless to me.

  • jsheard 2 days ago

    Can we bring this https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Crystal128-penguin.s... version back instead? I hear Apple has decreed that glossy/glassy design is cool again.

    • eldog_ 2 days ago

      Testament to it's appeal is when it's used by businesses to promote their ice creams/slushies.

    • pndy 2 days ago

      There were times when Crystal was even "ported" as Windows visual theme and later as package that swapped resource files: https://archive.org/details/crystal-xp-3.0

      • cdrini 2 days ago

        Wow what a flashback! I think I used to use this back in the day.

        • pndy 2 days ago

          I had tons of these "visual styles" and I remember how MS liked to patch themeui.dll and uxtheme.dll often rendering theming broken.

          There were also attempts at customizing XP booting screen to achieve the perfect "it's not Windows" effect but that could easily render installation unbootable

    • NoiseBert69 2 days ago

      Stroke Tux

      • pndy 2 days ago

        Clearly modules were broken and kernel couldn't be build

  • juujian 2 days ago

    Couldn't quit put my finger on it, but soulless might be it. Doesn't capture Tux's personality.

  • gus_massa 2 days ago

    There are some buttons to change the details. I like the "big-eyes" and "sitting" version.

    • adzm 2 days ago

      GNU chimera version speaks to me

  • sudosteph 2 days ago

    I don't think Tux is perfect by any means, but that was my first impression too. It's the eyes. They look dead inside.

  • avian 2 days ago

    It has the corporate letterhead vibe. I guess for some that is a feature.

fuzzy_biscuit 2 days ago

It looks like a Hollow Knight character.

npteljes 2 days ago

To me it looks a bit creepy enlarged, but it works really well in small size, (which was the point)!

1bpp 2 days ago

The beady eyes & shape feel a bit too Android-y to me

numpad0 2 days ago

This is absurd. I literally spent 30 seconds with the image on GIMP, making just few warps and it's markedly better. I don't mean to make a pull request or anything and I still don't exactly like/love it, but my point is, the original clearly was built on solid artistic basis and yet they published the alien head. What was the author thinking?

1: http://numpad0.com/imgs/2025-09-28%20002632.png

e: I think by far the biggest problem is completely circular eyes. Just replacing it with ovals solve minimum half of the problem. Then the head can be enlarged for better feeling of attachment. The beak can be sharper too. But those are less problematic than the eyes. Even just removing them altogether helps.

blu3h4t 2 days ago

Nobody says anything about the tasmanin one. :)

Gravityloss 2 days ago

Reminds me of the Groke from Moomin

osigurdson 2 days ago

It looks appropriate for Halloween.

flohofwoe 2 days ago

Meh. Looks like a boring robot (pretty much a clone of the Android logo), the cute penguin is much better even when it looks old school by now.

1970-01-01 2 days ago

Looks too much like another emoji.

hulitu a day ago

> The Other Linux Logo

... shows the bloat from the head.