On Fri, Oct 31, 2008 at 10:44 PM, F Wolff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Vr, 2008-10-31 at 12:17 +0100, Petr Kovar wrote:
>> What about not using the foot logo, or introducing a new logo, if desirable, >> in Thai (and Lao, and perhaps some others) locale only? Would the logo >> change be sufficient solely as a part of your l10n processes? > > This sounds like an unintrusive and simple solution. I'm guessing there > is no infrastructure in place to do this today, but is probably possible > with a little bit of work. Using icon theme can also be unintrusive. However, it should be nice to make the logo better known, so that people can recognize it as another GNOME representation, not a fork or rebranding or casual customization. For example, the Gorilla theme is more associated with Ximian than the standard GNOME. We may have a new theme, but people may not treat it as GNOME. And it would look weird to use the new logo in promotion web sites and events. Some recognition at GNOME site would help retain the unity in activities. BTW, having repeated some assertions for several times, I think it's enough for a dedicated live page: http://live.gnome.org/FootAndCulturalIssue This summarizes what we have got so far, and what to do with the cultural issue. Regards, -- Theppitak Karoonboonyanan http://linux.thai.net/~thep/ _______________________________________________ gnome-i18n mailing list gnome-i18n@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-i18n