Forum Discussion
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May 09, 2017New infographic: Periodic Table of Office 365
I consider myself a SharePoint geek, but I play more and more in the larger Office 365 (O365) sphere these days. In doing so, I’ve noticed that O365 as a concept is difficult to explain… both to IT f...
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Jun 22, 2017It's actually done in Illustrator due to the complexity and graphic-heavy nature. I've gotten so may requests like this that I just can't send the original out. Too overwhelming and not enough time to deal with them all. Sorry. :(
Paul Stawski
Jun 23, 2017Copper Contributor
No problem. But can you then explain how I could get the (white-filled) icons for all of the services? Did you screen scrape them or can we get to the originals?
Paul
- Paul StawskiAug 04, 2017Copper ContributorI found the icons are actually (in a) webfont. Which can be downloaded from http://o365icons.cloudapp.net/
If you install the .ttf as a font, you can use it in PowerPoint (as a symbol). Visio unfortunately doesn't work well, showing question marks instead of the glyphs. Did some conversion back to a vector with Inkscape and then pasted into Visio. - DeletedJun 23, 2017
Google images was my starting point for all of them. Have to be careful, too. Sometimes Microsoft changes them (and old ones are still prominent results) and sometimes they're, like, fan-created versions of them, using the wrong fonts and even yucky versions of the icons.
- Paul StawskiAug 04, 2017Copper ContributorI found the icons are actually (in a) webfont. Which can be downloaded from http://o365icons.cloudapp.net/
See also my other post about how to (re-)vectorize them.