To me, this is a trend that I could’ve just as easily reported on ten years ago, but now they are more complex, bringing new relevance. By laying one circle over the other, you see the intensity build up. For instance, Michael Bierut transformed the MasterCard logo by going back to a pure transparent overlay and getting rid of the striped element in the middle. They’re trying to find new ways to push it forward, and that is what’s supposed to happen. And that’s cool because it shows me that designers aren’t being complacent. Every time I think they’re dead, they continue to sprout they put out new roots, and something else blooms.
Transparency and monoline are a couple of trends that have had long lives because they continue to evolve. Geometric shapes and forms to create multidimensional logos, often using monolines was prevalent. Geometry was the other one that really was coming into play.We saw stripes in massive abundance, being used in concentric circles, letterforms, and patterns like chevrons, zig zags, and simulating waves for movement.We’re starting to see a bit of an upswing with more attention given to those really simple elements that we were looking at last year. It’d be fair to say that the pendulum has barely moved. Simple shapes, lines, type, and forms either converged or played solo to create solid, lasting marks that were easily interpreted.
I have checked log files, they all describe the same error, without further information. Error: "Connection refused: no further information.] I am facing the issue of JIRA not even wanting to connect to the DB Server, I checked firewalls, connections, ports, everything possible. I understand MSSQL 2017 is not Officially supported. I have been attempting to setup Jira Service Desk to interface with our Microsoft SQL Server (2017).