On Fri, 5 Jan 2024 13:07:06 +0100 (CET), Jan Engelhardt wrote:
I don't run desktop Leap (but Tumbleweed), so I would have never seen that Leap wallpaper to even form an opinion about it. You can't just translate that to "warm feedback" (or cold feedback for that matter).
Same here, and also those who updated to 15.5 and were not using the default wallpaper probably would never have seen it either, as their previously-set wallpaper preferences would have precluded the new wallpaper being seen. The majority of those who would have seen it would probably not have even known there was a different logo previously (ie, first-time users installing it). There would have been some who were familiar with the old logo who would have installed it, but their focus probably wouldn't be on the desktop wallpaper post-install; they likely would be installing it for a specific purpose (testing, reinstalling a broken system, migrating an old system to a new one, etc). So it seems that this decision is being driven solely by a lack of negative feedback from people who probably would never have had reason to see it (or to notice it) in the first place. This does not seem to be a time to declare "silence is alignment", when nobody had a reason to look for this unannounced (or "stealth announced") change. That seems to be a good reason to hold back on including it at this point (and potentially reversing direction), since the logo change was brought to everyone's attention with the recent vote (regardless of the issues with the vote itself). On Fri, 5 Jan 2024 10:38:01 +0000, Bernd Ritter wrote:
the distro logos are not an identity. They identify a branch of development.
By definition, if they *identify* a branch of development, they are part of the brand *identity*. Identity: the fact of being who or what a person or thing is. Identify: establish or indicate who or what (someone or something) is. Q.E.D. -- Jim Henderson Please keep on-topic replies on the list so everyone benefits