On 03/20/2016 11:06 AM, nadim@nadim.computer wrote:
However, what comes after that is the problem: the Workstation has a bunch of sentences that either make very specific technical references or in general contribute little value to selling the project. These could be fixed by focusing on a more general introduction to the desktop environment, daily-use features, and cutting-edge differences that separate Fedora from other desktop operating systems.
Some specifics would be helpful.
The most critical problem I have with the website are the photos: they're incredibly bad. The photos are of, literally, decade-old ThinkPads
The top photo is of a Thinkpad Carbon X1 that, at the time the photo was taken, was a couple of months old. I believe at this point it's a little over a year, which makes sense since the website was launched with F21 which was ~1 year ago.
that are completely covered in dirt and dust, running Fedora.
There is one photo, taken of an actual real Fedora user, where there is some light reflecting on the screen and there's some dust on the screen. Sure, we could process that photo to remove that. We can do that. I don't think it's the huge deal you're portraying it to be. Also, her laptop is a Thinkpad and it cannot be older than 3 years, likely was 1-2 years old at the time of the photoshoot.
I appreciate constructive feedback, but spinning a laptop that is at most 3 years old to be 10 years old is really not constructive. I used a Thinkpad in 2006, it was a T41 and it looked quite a bit different and was noticeably thicker with a much smaller screen and was less sleek-looking.
It's like a caricature of a Linux distro website. I find that to be very off-putting and unprofessional.
Again, let's be constructive. This is not.
These photos should be replaced quickly and I can't believe they've been on the website every time I've gone to download a Fedora image over the past two years!
This site has been active for 1 year, not 2.
They can at least be replaced with photos of clean ThinkPads, and better yet, laptops where what's actually on the screen is an interesting Fedora use-case that is clearly visible in the photo. If anyone can point me to the correct repository for the website, I will make pull requests with suggestions to make the website more reasonable, and I will also contribute content and try to make the page more useful and accessible to people interested in Fedora. Right now, the website seems to be made by Fedora users and seems to target people who *already* use Fedora, which is very near-sighted and ultimately a bad strategy.
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