On Mon, 2009-03-30 at 15:25 -0500, Matthew Nuzum wrote:
> My suggestion is to include a theme that has a distinctly feminine > appeal. I'm not suggesting eye-burning pink (like is included in XP), > but choosing a human related palette that says to women, "This is for > you." Sheesh, seeing the lack of women especially here, that would mean to design a theme that is not for ourselves. How could you ever suggest for such a deed of selflessness or professionalism? ;) > Here are some of the thoughts behind my suggestion: > > * When going to the grocery store with my son and daughter they often > pick cereal based on the colour of the box. Yes, this is insane, but > my daughter knows that if the box is pink it's for girls and since > she's a girl she wants it. I disagree with this article on a few > fundamental (but overall minute) points, but just to show there is > evidence for this: > http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2007/aug/21/sciencenews.fashion Hmm. It's hard to know in how far gender specific color preferences are cultural or biological. It seems the "pink for girls, blue for boys" is a rather new convention. Some claim it was reversed at some point, while other say there simply wasn't a convention for a long time. http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=238733 http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2831/was-pink-originally-the-color-for-boys-and-blue-for-girls Not the most credible links, but I read about it elsewhere, too. One thing on the biological side we can be sure of is that the most common color vision deficiency is for red-green and far more often affects men than women. I agree that it would be nice to have at least one theme aimed at women. To get there, one would first have to do some research. Then you need female testers. -- Thorsten Wilms thorwil's design for free software: http://thorwil.wordpress.com/ -- ubuntu-art mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-art
