Greg Swift wrote:
On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 09:43, Michael DeHaan <michael.dehaan(a)gmail.com
<mailto:michael.dehaan@gmail.com>> wrote:
Re: the idea of a better welcome page, the
cobbler.github.com
<
http://cobbler.github.com> site is also at
http://github.com/cobbler and can also take pull requests, if
someone with web-design chops wants to add some better links to the
docs and more impressive blingy-ness. That would be awesome.
It's about time we had a really good logo too :)
Actually we got with the Fedora Design team, and despite lots of
conflict (dear lord) we did come out with a logo.
http://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/design-team/2011-July/004611.html
I haven't gotten commit set rebased on new github setup
https://github.com/gregswift/cobbler/commit/70f2c08c7beb89a35e364eeefd167...
logo specifically:
https://github.com/gregswift/cobbler/blob/70f2c08c7beb89a35e364eeefd1678b...
favicon:
https://github.com/gregswift/cobbler/blob/70f2c08c7beb89a35e364eeefd1678b...
[...]
"Hand crafted"? With an old-style boot? But in my view the whole point
of cobbler installation is the opposite. Isn't it to have a
high-quality, reliable, automated production line for multiple instances
of machines? The last thing we want is old-style, geek-in-a-garage
sys.admins. spending their lives hand-crafting every detail on every box
and inevitably getting something, somewhere wrong. That's completely
unscalable: the very opposite of what cobbler is about, isn't it?
I'm no artist. But something like a a shelf of computer icons (possibly
two or three instances of two or three different types. And to the
lower left, a shiny, fashionable streamlined boot in mid-swing, and some
curvy lines to suggest that this boot has just deposited those computers
on that shelf. Or something like that.
-- David Lee