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Twitter has removed the iconic bird logo and adopted ‘X’ as its official logo. This move comes after Elon Musk announced the change over the weekend.The change is already live on the website.
Phil Pascuzzo, who designed the original Twitter bird logo, and his daughter Ava, 6, look at his designs on his home computer in Delmar. The social platform's new owner, Elon Musk, announced last ...
The tech billionaire started removing the bird logo that has been part of Twitter’s identity since 2006. By Ryan Mac and Tiffany Hsu Ryan Mac reports on Twitter, and Tiffany Hsu on ...
The blue bird is dead. Long live the black X. As the Twitter birdie flew off to logo heaven this week, something else also seemed to be vanishing. A whole aesthetic. For the record: 10:06 p.m ...
Elon Musk has started having Twitter's iconic blue bird logo removed at the headquarters. One sign couldn't be taken down as it broke apart, leaving remnants still attached, per an NYT reporter ...
Elon Musk on Monday explained his decision to strip Twitter of its famous blue-bird logo as a move to remake the business into a broad ... “The Twitter name made sense when it was just 140 ...
Twitter's iconic blue bird logo was officially replaced Monday with the letter "X." A day earlier, the URL "X.com" began to automatically redirect users to Twitter.Taken together, the two changes ...
Twitter owner Elon Musk said overnight Sunday that his social media platform will retire its widely recognized blue bird logo, and eventually the Twitter name, as part of his relentless effort to ...
Twitter rebrands as X 00:28. Twitter launched its new logo on Monday, replacing the blue bird with a white X on a black background as the Elon Musk-owned company moves toward rebranding as X.
A video showing iPhone users how to switch back to Twitter's original bluebird logo from X has gone viral. Donato Fasano/Getty "As soon as I heard Musk was wanting to changed the name, I thought ...
In changing Twitter’s blue logo, owner Elon Musk is trading a bird in the hand for the promise of a wide-ranging “everything app" analysts say may never materialize ...