st week, the company changed its logo. To the uninitiated, it may not appear to be the most disruptive change, but for a company that’s played a huge role in the enthusiast Android community, it’s indicative of the major changes that are happening within. The move comes a year after it announced that it would shift gears from merely releasing CyanogenMod as a free ROM to producing custom software in partnership with hardware makers. “It seemed fitting to tie our new br identity to this anniversary,” said Abhisek Devkota, head of public relations at Cyanogen, in an email interview. “Over the last year we’ve gone through an incredible amount of growth with new members joining, new projects being started products hitting the market.” Cyanogen’s logo redesign wasn’t initially part of the plan; the idea has only been in the works since February. “It was one of the first objectives we accomplished as a company,” explained Devkota. “If you don’t know why you are doing something, how can you ever hope the general population—or your future employees for that matter—to be invested support you?” The rebring eliminates Cid, the cute little bug-eyed caricature who has adorned Cyanogenmod’s logo since 2012, replaces it instead with a hexagon. Cid’s not gone, though. “He is a part of our community has been a loyal mascot,” said Devkota. “That is what he was meant to be from the beginning: a mascot, not a br identity or logo.” As for the new logo, the hexagon is more than just a shape. The official Cyanogen blog goes into detail behind its meaning: Cyanogen will make several design changes to fit the new br, though Devkota didn’t go into detail. ” know our core audience; many of those folks want the ‘stock Android’ look feel.” The new br will be present on the upcoming Oneus One, then eventually pushed out as an over-the-air update for the Oppo N1. “Both companies have been supportive of the process result,” added Devkota. Despite all that, Cyanogen remains committed to its initial mission, it promises its loyal user base that it will stick to its roots. “The beauty of CyanogenMod is that we don’t restrict user choice,” said Devkota. “If users want a route to not see our changes, then we empower them to do that easily within the OS.”