An arrow pointing into a folder, similar to this. Sidesteps the tech issue altogether.

I mean, you’re just replacing one archaic symbol with another.
I still use folders to organize paper documents. Taxes and medical stuff mostly.
Normal people call computer directories ‘folders’.
I agree. I heard recently a lot of kids under 20 grew up in an iPhone, iPad, and chrome world and never learned “folder” or directory concepts so it’s a tough transition in the work world. Paper organizers are not nearly as ubiquitous as they once were.
It connects it to another computer symbol, the folder which is seen plenty of times as the thing containing files. It’s a solid solution.
Isn’t that used as an icon for moving a file from one folder to another?
Yeah, if an open folder icon means ‘open a file’, then this inversion means saving the file.
Yea replace the 90s tech icon for the filing cabinet paper folder , from who knows when. It’s actually a good suggestions this technology still hasn’t disappeared. But it will soon, as foretold by the paperless office prophecies. So I think a half buried treasure chest icon would be better as a forever lasting icon.
We should do away with directories. Just one big block of files.
Screw multiple files, just use one big one. Just append anything you want to add and you’ll have everything in 1 spot
Makes sense. Then you can add some kind of index to the file so you can jump to the parts you want. Just track a list of chunks, so they don’t have to be contiguous.
Yeah, and we could give that huge file some kind of internal and logical structure to find those chunks, maybe something hierarchical with human readable names!
Yeah! Now we’re cooking! I bet we could really improve resiliency and seek times with different data structures, too. B trees?
Or maybe we could keep the flat structure and have some kind of syntax for querying the data… some kind of structured language.
Easy to find saves time
PalmOS actually did that. Programs had records saved in a central database, not files.
Yes look everything up by
keyworddescribing its contents to AI agent.
Is there an icon that expresses the default cloud save location as well as the circuitous GUI you need to navigate yo select your desired location on local storage?
SD card. Half us old timers won’t even realize it’s not a floppy disk.

A crucifix…
…because Jesus saves.
And takes half damage
And saves you from swearing…
every letter in the alphabet started as a symbol of something 2500-6000 years ago, “A” for instance is an upside-down Ox head. people in future generations will continue using the floppy symbol, cuz they learned that means saving, despite floppies not being relevant to their lives
Nobody else immediately thought of this?

Incremental save needs to be Buddha
I think we should just keep the floppy disk symbol at this point, because it doesn’t matter what it was originally based on or whether that exists any more–everyone knows what that symbol means, and it can’t really be confused with anything else.
There’s no point making an icon that looks like any other particular kind of storage device since those are changing all the time. So we either have to pick some real world thing like a safe or warehouse or grain silo or whatever. or invent some completely new symbol that’s not related to anything and then everyone would have to learn it. Which takes us back to just keeping the floppy disk symbol.
grain silo
This is a hilariously awkward suggestion. At the scale of the average save icon, what do you think a grain silo symbol would look like?

This makes me think “new file”
Timeless. Ubiquitous. Mandatory for all of K-12 and often beyond. Perfect.
This gives Calibre FOSS vibes.
A scroll and quill is a pretty good idea, but it’d be better as something more squarish than irregular, I think.
I agree. I made this jokingly, but a number of people seem to actually like it. I also started thinking on how to improve it immediately after I made it lol.
A CD image. Got to move with the times.
Isnt it the glorious zip disks turn first?
A squirrel, as in to squirrel it away
Best answer, but the save button should save the file somewhere random each time on the storage if the icon is a squirrel.
Doesn’t everybody save stuff somewhere in the mess that is their desktop?
So, like my work computer then
Kind of just sounds like OneDrive.
They’ll get it for you if you want it, but you don’t get to know where it’s actually stored (or who else is accessing it).
Sorry for not submitting my homework on time. The squirrel took it away, never to be seen again.

What a save!
Chat disabled for 3 seconds.
Okay.
A cassette tape.
Han solo frozen in carbonite
If the floppy disk was no longer the save symbol for software, and I had to chose one, I’d chose the floppy disk symbol.
But you worded your question wisely to avoid that loophole, so I’m not sure what to use instead for an otherwise unique and ubiquitous symbol, already known as “the save file icon” for two generations that have not seen it.
While we’re at it, let’s also replace the phone icons with a rectangle, as to not confuse anyone.
Just change one pixel and call it new.
You could make it a zip drive. No one would know the difference…
A safe or vault symbol as an indicator for safe keeping
I’ve already seen it replaced in some applications. Don’t like that.
I know it’s “if you have to”, but if I have any choice at all, the floppy icon stays.
What even is the point in changing it? Like sure we don’t use floppies anymore, but it’s a well established symbol for saving.














