On Thursday July 22 2010 08:44:35 Jan Engelhardt wrote:
On Thursday 2010-07-22 08:20, Stephan Kleine wrote:
So here is my proposal:
How about we use an animal as code name and its main colors as the distro colors for a release?
Animals names Already Trademarked™ by Ubuntu. Do not explore this any further.
No, they actually trademarked the alphabet.
E.g. we could use a Zebra for some stylish black and white theme or some exotic fish for some more colorful one or ... the choice is endless. The only important thing is that those themes shouldn't be "pressed" on anyone but it should be easy to revert to a previous one or ....
Or ... or ... or we could just leave it as is. Really, throwing all these ideas in with "or..." hints towards a dilemma. Adding more possibilities only means we will be stuck between more choices.
Well, my point simply is to have something that can't be drawn into some "never imagined" discussion and also allows us to vary the colors (as said, e.g. I'm pretty tired of green).
What do you think?
Identity implies consistency. I want my green. And quite frankly, even changing the artwork every release I consider too much. (The 11.3 backgrounds are some ugly cyanide bubble mix; I am still using a retrofitted 11.1 grayband theme.)
Well, make up the "corporate identity" by shapes or some Geeko logo but I just had it with the same color. Why should we always stick with that green? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org