This was discussed long ago... Snakes are a nice reference to the Python community but are not appealing outside the community. They are not exactly perceived as friendly animals.
On Oct 10, 3:19 pm, Anthony <av201...@yahoo.com> wrote: > For what it's worth, I don't think we need a snake in the logo. At > least, it can be difficult to get it right -- snake logos can easily > end up looking either too fierce/scary or too childish/cartoonish. > Most other Python frameworks and libraries don't have snake logos (not > to mention that the language was actually named after Monty Python, > not a snake). The few snake logos that actually look OK are typically > highly stylized and don't really look too "snaky". > > Anthony > > On Oct 10, 2:24 pm, rochacbruno <rochacbr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I did not understand your suggestion, what user icon? > > > Are you saying to remove "web2py" leaving just the WP or removing the big W > > leaving just the P? > > > I am working on new ideas for the logo, small changes. > > > Enviado via iPhone > > > Em 10/10/2010, às 14:21, Thadeus Burgess <thade...@thadeusb.com> escreveu: > > > > I think the "w" is redundant in the logo. It just looks funny. > > > > What if the logo was just the user icon in the middle? > > > > -- > > > Thadeus > > > > On Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 8:04 AM, johntynan <jgty...@gmail.com> wrote: > > >> Great work with the new web2py site! I like how well the top and > > >> right hand navigation is used and I was glad to discover some > > >> resources about web2py that I didn't realize were available. > > > >> I have one question. Do you think the twitter link should direct > > >> people to the twitter search for web2py, as opposed to the web2py > > >> twitter account? http://twitter.com/search/web2py > > > >> Excellent work!- Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text - > >