Published: September 10, 2018 | Updated: September 6, 2019
When freelancing at a design studio in the 1990s we used to use a Sun Microsystems SPARC server to hold the image library and to run an OPI (Open Prepress Interface) system. OPI cuts network traffic and speeds up workflow by automatically creating a low-res version of any image you save on it. All the workers in the a studio use these images in their layouts instead of the full res ones. When the time comes to create artwork, the server automatically substitutes these placeholders for the full-res images. So you only need one storage location for high res images and, instead of everybody sharing them constantly and clogging the network up, they just use the tiny placeholders instead. When worked out across the day factoring in the number of workers in a large studio, the number of images they place in documents like catalogues and the size of each image it saves a massive amount of time and, therefore, money. Whilst this is undoubtably a genius idea, it wasn't that which fascinated me. It was the logo on the front of the server. I'd spend time I was meant to be working gazing at it and thinking how clever it was.

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