Re: "What is the Fedora Project?"

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On 10/08/2009 10:40 AM, inode0 wrote:
On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 8:11 AM, Mike McGrath<mmcgrath@xxxxxxxxxx>  wrote:
Upstream developers regularly come to me (as the Infrastructure Lead)
Looking for additional resources to do X or Y.  I'd like to start
providing that.  This comes both in terms of just guests to do testing, as
well as infrastructure for clients on our installed userbase to do
reporting back for various information.

I'm still struggling to understand what sorts of real problems are
made easier to solve by the "What is Fedora?" framework. The default
spin keeps coming up so I guess either the board isn't happy with how
that is working now or thinks additional guidance is needed by those
creating it currently? To help alleviate new user/contributor
confusion about what Fedora is?

Knowing what Fedora (or just the default spin) is meant to be and who is it for is really essential for the design team to produce top-notch designs and artwork in a productive and efficient manner.

E.g., the redesign work we've been doing on the fedoraproject.org website [1] at times has been pretty stressful because there are at least 2 main and oppositional views on what Fedora is and who is it for, and people from the different camps give (at times exceedingly harsh) feedback and criticism of the designs. The problem is, there is no way a design can satisfy one camp without seriously compromising the needs and goals of the others. As a designer, this places me in a very uncomfortable situation.

The 2 views as I would summarize them are:

- Fedora is a beautiful, usable desktop for everyone (or at least, we're getting there.) Pandas are okay! We're ready to push to the masses.

- Fedora is a menagerie of equal spins for highly-technical folks and FOSS developers. Don't you dare insult our intelligence with pandas. Go back to Sesame street.

Don't get me started on the amount of stress the lack of answers to the fundamental questions here have caused with respect to the Fedora artwork & theming. :)

The main issue from a design perspective is that if no target is defined, then the target becomes 'everybody' - and I personally feel it's impossible to make a top-notch, beautiful design when trying to please everybody. You need the focus of a specific set of target users' context to be able to make the right decisions in the design process to come up with a good design.

I know I probably sound like I'm set against this business, I really
just don't see so much of the upside to it as I think you do and I'd
like to really understand what its purpose is intended to be.

I hope the above explanation helps? :/

~m

[1] https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Website_redesign_2009

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