Hi again.
My understanding of artwork neutrality, when being discussed in our community, fell into one of two contexts
Version Neutrality - Should our artwork be 'version neutral', and therefore be suitable for reuse across multiple openSUSE versions, instead of remaking/redesigning totally new designs for each release?
In this scenario, my opinion is both yes and no - I have no objection to version neutral artwork, but I prefer version specific, and if we have the people and time to do it, I think we should
Thanks for the good summary.
If we got enough time and (wo)menpower, we should use different design al-through the distro. As we all know, last release was a bit streesful, but hopefully we can get it right for 12.2
Therefor we need an early concept submission deadline, so we got enough time to work on the distro artwork.
That is awesome. Have we thought about a good design idea to work into the wallpapers? Let's submit that and then fix an early deadline and choose the wallpapers.
The other 'neutrality' I've seen discussed is 'Desktop Neutrality' - Should KDE and GNOME be 'forced' to use the same Artwork, given both desktops and their different environment might favour different designs?
Personally, I feel we get this 'right' currently - we seem keen to pick a design that is easy to use across the distribution, but there seems no problem in minor alterations for specific needs (eg. different cropping for Grub menu, colour changing over time for GNOME, etc) I like the idea and think that we should have the freedom to have different designs in GNOME and KDE, but just because we *could* doesn't mean we *should*, and I think a unified core design being used differently across the distribution is a way to go.
As for all the other 'neutralities' you could speak about with artwork - that might be something to keep in mind, but I think the two issues above is what most people have been talking about when speaking about artwork neutrality - feel free to pipe up if I'm wrong though! :)
Imho, we shouldn't create different designs for GNOME and KDE.
Greets Marcus
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-artwork+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-artwork+owner@opensuse.org
So the idea is that we should generate artwork without a version specific theme. Something that we could use for a few versions. A good way to do this would be to create wallpaper sources with any versioning theme separate, on a separate layer or object (inkscape) so that it can be easily removed when other artists or new versions come around. I believe we do this to some extent already. The git repo shows the sources for each of the files that we use, but I am not sure if they have this specific feature of separating version-related objects or layers as separate.
No, it's more about elements in the distro design that should be version neutral. That means e.g. the YaST background, the Grub/syslinux splash, the application splashes and maybe even the bootsplash. The wallpaper could and should of course vary. Greets Marcus -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-artwork+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-artwork+owner@opensuse.org