That is good input Jos. I mostly think it a good idea moving away from oxygen because of the lack of customization that you can do on it. QtCurve has a very detailed interface that lets you change just about whatever you want. Something that is not available currently on Oxygen. If you look into kde-look.org you will see that there are plenty more qtcurve configurations for download than Oxygen tweaks. This gives me the impression, that at some level, KDE users want to be able to customize their window styling. But obviously, such is a very personal preference. People from the community can vote and see whether they would like to change this. On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 6:24 PM, Jos Poortvliet <jos@opensuse.org> wrote:
On Sunday 19 June 2011 23:03:40 andi robert wrote:
I was thinking we could add custom icons, window styles (qtcurve for max compatibility with gtk apps) a new color scheme, and custom widgets for the KDE desktop.
This is what I have currently
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/823/snapshot68.png/
Although, that image has more.
I wouldn't deviate too much from the standard KDE look. Especially Oxygen is very good, well maintained and with oxygen-gtk integrates GTK apps perfectly (lots of improvements coming with 4.7). With Oxygen you benefit from the hard work of some incredibly good artists - they for example optimized the colors to not look crappy on many old-and-bad monitors. That was difficult work and something I'd rather not have to re-do. And think about graphics performance, usability, stuff like that. GNOME 3, meanwhile, also focusses heavily on a 'standard' look. And the same there goes for colors etc.
We can and should of course have our own wallpaper, GRUB, boot-, login- and app splashes. Moreover, we could do as we did before with the Plasma theme - have a subtle variation, replacing the circles with something more opensuse-y.
I like this too. The more clever branding, the better. I was thinking also that it could be pretty good to try different default widgets, not just the folder one. But something like Weather, RSS or something of the sort. Even a small plasma tutorial to start using openSUSE.
It's not my choice, obviously, but I'd vote against moving to a whole different theme and radically changing the look of KDE and GNOME. Both have a modern, well-thought out look. We have limited resources, let's focus on a good background, artwork for the DVD and cover, release pictures, things like that. I bet that'll be more than enough work already :D
Cheers, Jos
On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 10:27 AM, Javier Llorente <javier@opensuse.org> wrote:
Forwarding to opensuse-artwork...
---------- Mensaje Reenviado ----------
Asunto: Re: [opensuse-artwork] Base colour and code-name of release Fecha: Domingo, 19 de Junio de 2011 De: andi robert <anditosan1000@gmail.com> Para: Javier Llorente <javier@opensuse.org>
On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 6:01 AM, Javier Llorente <javier@opensuse.org> wrote:
El Lunes, 13 de Junio de 2011 08:43:47 Atri Bhattacharya escribió:
Hi! I don't know if this has already been discussed and therefore is redundant, and I apologise in advance if that is the case, but I wanted to suggest that we base the artwork (esp., the wallpaper) of the release on the colour referred to by the release code-name. For 12.1 the code-name is "Asparagus" referring to the colour #87A96B [1].
Bye
That was already done with 11.4 (Celadon) :-P
-- Javier Llorente
That is a good idea. It makes me thing of how much green there will be on this one. Please let's do more than just change the wallpaper please :D Our openSUSE can use more green than a change of shirt.
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Andi, what do you suggest for that? :)
-- Javier Llorente
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