Brandon wrote:
Looking at http://www.seattle.gov/ , I propose some version of the Space Needle as a symbol for Seattle.
Be mindful that any representation of the Space Needle would require permission from the Space Needle Corporation. They're rather protective of their registered trademark "image or likeness". Likewise, the Chief Seattle statue in Belltown (I believe) would also require permission of the City. It's not impossible and won't necessarily cost anything. There's just an extra step required. In another message, Brandon also wrote:
I will cough some things out when I get back...
Thanks! -Daniel PS - Alternatively, I considered a variation on the http://alu.org planet within parens with a "you are here" marker. I couldn't quite get the right angle of Earth with my cell phone camera, though.
Daniel J Pezely wrote:
Brandon wrote:
Looking at http://www.seattle.gov/ , I propose some version of the Space Needle as a symbol for Seattle.
Be mindful that any representation of the Space Needle would require permission from the Space Needle Corporation.
They're rather protective of their registered trademark "image or likeness". Likewise, the Chief Seattle statue in Belltown (I believe) would also require permission of the City.
It's not impossible and won't necessarily cost anything. There's just an extra step required.
I have trouble with the legal concept of them being able to stifle "any" use of the Needle, whether concretely or abstractly expressed. I doubt it, but I'm not up on trademark law with regards to conspicious architecture. Especially architecture that used public funds for its construction. I can see them going after people anyways, even if they don't really have a case. But you have to be on the radar for there to be a case. I think getting sued by the Space Needle Corp would be proof of our success!
PS - Alternatively, I considered a variation on the http://alu.org planet within parens with a "you are here" marker. I couldn't quite get the right angle of Earth with my cell phone camera, though.
The shapes have a nice roundness. Thematically I like the globe, as for me it invokes world conquest. I think what's needed is an Earth without clouds, with the Puget Sound centered, so that the Pacific Northwest is apparent. I wonder if recognizability can be achieved in a small logo. Can't quite judge from the ALU logo, with the clouds in the way. I will experiment with this when I have time. One of my 3D demos could be an Earth zoom. I've attempted planetary rendering before, for my would-be game Ocean Mars. What a fiasco; that's the project that drove me to seek languages other than C++. Time to try again! I'm going to guess that the ALU isn't using this as a terribly serious trademark. It's cute but it looks like someone's home job, not something that's been through the legal wringer. Also, I'm imagining they'd be interested in any "rotate the planet to your local Chapter" software. It does create a wrinkle though: does anyone notice the difference between LispSea and the ALU and any other chapter of the ALU? I just realized that Seattle could be crosshaired by latitude and longitude. Make an open circle at the intersection, like a city on a map. That could distinguish any chapter. Cheers, Brandon Van Every
participants (2)
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Brandon J. Van Every
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Daniel J Pezely