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5 Mind-Blowing Meanings Of Everyday Symbols

Symbols are designed to express ideas but, even though we all know what these symbols mean, few people know their origin. So without further ado, here they are, 5 everyday symbols you had no idea about their origins.

5. Bluetooth

Bluetooth was named after the Danish Viking King Harald “Bluetooth” Gormsson, who apparently had a… blue tooth and was famous for uniting Norway and Denmark. Bluetooth wireless developers felt that the name fit since the technology unites the PC and the cellular industries.
The symbol is a combination of the King’s initials in Danish Runes:

Photo: Harald Bluetooth

4. Apple Command Key

Known as the Gorgon loop, this symbol comes from the Nordic countries. It is used mainly in Swedish road signs to highlight places of interest and this was the reason it was chosen by Apple as the command key:

Photo: Pinterest

3. Power button

The binary system has been used in things like switches and toggles since World War 2. 1 means “ON” and 0 means “OFF”, and the power button is a combination of the two:

Photo: TechBlogOut

2. USB symbol

The USB symbol is based on the Poseidon’s trident. The different signs at the edges (circle, triangle, square) signify that many different devices can be connected using USB ports:

Photo: Intel Malaysia

1. Peace sign

It began as a symbol for the campaign for NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT in Britain. It uses the flag-signalling system, superimposing N over D:

Photo: www.nuclearweaponsfree.org

If you like what you read, then you will definitely love this one: 10 Awesome Google Search Secrets You Can Try Right Now

Photos: Intel Malaysia, youthvoices.net
Photoshop: I’m A Useless Info Junkie

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