From e6ce71a84010c56b7b91ffeab833ebe529b97b36 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jayam Srivastava Date: Sun, 31 May 2026 13:58:41 +0530 Subject: [PATCH] Added source in the blog --- blog/google-icon-update/index.md | 3 +-- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/blog/google-icon-update/index.md b/blog/google-icon-update/index.md index 4a19d1c6..8a6c579f 100644 --- a/blog/google-icon-update/index.md +++ b/blog/google-icon-update/index.md @@ -37,7 +37,6 @@ import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs'; import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem'; import ZoomImage from '@site/src/components/ZoomImage'; import imgGsuite from './assets/03-google-old-gsuite-logo.png'; -import imgWorkspace from './assets/06-googleworkspace-new-logo.png'; @@ -96,7 +95,7 @@ Within hours of the 2020 announcement, the internet responded with a very specif ![Github](./assets/04-google-old-outline-logo.png) -The complaint was not just aesthetic. It was functional. When apps share the same four colors and similar shapes, your brain cannot build distinct visual shortcuts for each one. You have to read the icon rather than recognize it. That adds cognitive friction dozens of times a day. Multiply that across 3 billion Google Workspace users and the accumulated frustration becomes significant. +The complaint was not just aesthetic. It was functional. When apps share the same four colors and similar shapes, your brain cannot build distinct visual shortcuts for each one. You have to read the icon rather than recognize it. That adds cognitive friction dozens of times a day. Multiply that across 3 billion Google Workspace users (Source: [Google Workspace](https://workspace.google.com/howitsdone/)) and the accumulated frustration becomes significant. ![Github](./assets/06-googleworkspace-new-logo.png)