Myonly real reason being that choice is that it seems to be a convention in all major icon font library & icon font database. A quick search for "login" or "logout" on or will show that they are most of the time use this way (with 1-2 exceptions).
The green exit sign has been used for many years now and is well recognized as intuitive and clear, even on countries that still use text signs predominantly. Obviously, the advantage is that the pictogram makes the idea clear "move fast through this hole/door to a safe place". You can read a bit more about how Yukio Ota's design was conceived in this wikipedia entry.
If you consider the meaning of the sign itself, using it as login/logout, it's a bit stretched since the only remaining part is the movement, but not the speed or emotional state associated. But, our brain is used to abstract and extrapolate ideas, so since we know that the green running man is going to cross the door, we can keep that part as a concept and use it, so you could use the icon with the text "login" and people would understand it, but I have my doubts if it's used as standalone icon with no text of input fields close to it.
As an extra reference for the green running man, in this article on
slate.com, you can read how there was also a very similar design from the Soviet Union. To be fair, I think that both designs convey the same idea with the same clarity, I wonder how much influence had the cold war on the decision, but that is just my curiosity.
Also, considering a common emergency exit, we see that it opens to the outside of the room we are in, so the common green running man, and your grey icon on the left, seem to use the same "push to do the action" idea.
About your grey icons, they are an evolution, or transformation of some icons that have been in use for some time now, which are the abstraction of the idea of crossing the door, but look like going "into" and "out" of a box.
In order not to spoil anything I will give some real life examples of different rounds of the game: (NOTE: Memory is weird thing. I am positive that all these stories happened as I told them, but that might not be 100% true. So, not facts, but memories.)
Morning: We were sleeping in our shelter. We were woken up by loud sound of shells. We peeked outside of the basement, and there he was. Not more than 100m from our building there was enemy tank that was shooting randomly on our building. We were safe, but our plan to play football that day was ruined.
War brings out the best and the worst from people. There were some terrible people in Sarajevo during the siege. They had everything whilst others had nothing. I found trading the most stressful part of the game. My dad had once traded a TV for a pack of cigarettes and few eggs. That is how life is. But that is a subject for another time. People can be amazingly good, and unthinkably terrible.
This is the game with a lot of card drawing and dice rolling, but again, luck of the draw, or dice roll, are nothing compared to unpredictable nature of being under the siege. Where your life depends on how drunk the sniper guy is. He might miss, or aim to something different and get you. I find luck, in TWOM, to be as thematic as anything else.
The only issue is that, if you are good enough, it will last a long time. The more you play it, the better you will be, the longer you will survive, the longer the game will be. But, here we come to another great component of the game, and that is SAVE option. It is a bit fiddly at first, but as everything else, becomes better with time. So you can save your progress and continue the game later.
However, this does not work as it is, because it is potentially unsafe, and "the user is responsible for ensuring the content is safe to put into the DOM". To make it work would need to understand and then implement strict contextual escaping. This is where I gave up on the HTML method, in favour of using uib-popover-template.
NB As uib-popover-template "takes text that specifies the location of a template", the location needs to render as "'popover.html'" so the single quotes need to be escaped in the directive's inline template (or use an external template).
I tend to look at it pragmatically: that the election is a year away at most anyway, so until then everyone had best get a good grip on themselves and focus their minds before their behaviour tips the islands into an abyss instead of moving across the bridge to safety.
The minimum wage here in Malta is ridiculous and I just do not know how people manage on it. Many European countries have a much higher minimum wage then here. On the BBC I learned that the British government will limit SOCIAL benefits to 500 STERLING a week.
They have no solutions to improve the economy. They just want to get into power so that they can bring back their socialist agenda and put their carefully crafted unrevealed plan to withdraw Malta from the EU.
Not so in Malta, where we strut about spouting bollocks about the knowledge society when the whole place is chock a block with cranes and building sites, and where people sink their wealth into immoveable assets which do nothing for the economy.
I definitely have to say that Daphne hit the nail on the head: uncertainty in the construction industry has grown since last January because of a possible Labour government. If anyone had money to spend, they are holding on to it until they see how this election issue will be resolved.
People bought property not because the needed somewhere to live but as an investment on which they expected a return. Now that this market has cooled down and the housing bubble has exploded, there is no speculation and property prices have been driven downwards.
The situation is made worse by the fact that some of those who bought in the expectation that prices will continue to increase are now trying to offload their holdings before prices fall still further, and thereby contributing to over-supply in the market and a further downwards push in prices.
The economy is important but is not the most important or the only important factor. The two thousand year old dictum that man does not live on bread alone is still relevant. A richer economy often means that social inequalities increase.
The decline in home loans will spell less income for banks. However it also means that there are less persons living beyond their means. As the President of Malta recently stated, it is important to encourage a culture of saving.
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The Indiana Cyber Hub Blog is your all-new, online resource featuring helpful advice and guidance from the Hoosier State's Cybersecurity Program Director, along with the perspectives of a wide range of cyber industry experts.
In today's blog, we continue our conversation with Libby Stroud, who is completing an internship this summer with the State of Indiana and is working as a Communications Specialist with the Indiana Executive Council on Cybersecurity (IECC).
Interning for the State of Indiana has provided me with a lot of interesting opportunities that have added to my professional growth during my time here at the Indiana Office of Technology (IOT). I have gotten to attend cybersecurity summits, sit in on meetings for various committees involved with the Indiana Executive Council on Cybersecurity (IECC), and have been introduced to many impressive people in the communications space, cybersecurity field, and members of government.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This week's Indiana Cyber Hub blog is the first in a two-part series in celebration of National Intern Day and Indiana Intern Day. Part Two of the series will be posted on Friday, July 26th.
As our Communications Specialist, she has had the opportunity to play a lead role in working on everything from writing blogs and managing our social media marketing program on X, LinkedIn and Facebook, to helping us update our Indiana Cyber Hub website (and so much more).
It might not surprise you to learn that the chances of someone being struck by lightning are actually more likely than the odds of winning millions in a lottery. For most of us, we play for fun while keeping our day jobs. Regardless, cybercriminals are taking their chances winning their own lottery off you.
In the latest installment of this series, David Dungan, who serves as the executive director at the Center for Security Services and Cyber Defense at Anderson University, discusses job and internship/co-op scams that are targeting college students.
The Federal Trade Commission documented business and job opportunity scams are the fifth most prevalent type of fraud. Workers reported more than 80,000 job scams in 2023 accounting for $277 million in losses.
Job scams target specific types of employment, including nannies/caregivers, virtual personal assistants, mystery shoppers, government and postal job scams, or work from home opportunities such as reselling or reshipping jobs. Scammers may also pose as job placement services.
Students should reach out to trusted advisors at the school they're attending or mentors before accepting a job, internship, or co-op, especially if anything about the offer seems to be "too good" to be true. Finding a job or securing an internship or a co-op is a process that's stressful and there are a lot of factors that go into making a decision. Navigating through it all can be tricky. Students are encouraged to use all of the resources that are available -- and your instincts -- to help in recognizing a potential scam by noticing aspects that seem off about a prospective employer or job opportunity.
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