hi, > This is a flawed assumption. A few cases to think about: > > - Stephen's aforementioned lab situation use case. I'm sitting down to > work in the computer lab. I didn't install the machine, I have no clue > what it's running. > > - Developer use case, I have multiple VMs I'm working with; maybe I'm > testing software on different OSes. I'm trying to locate the correct VM. > (This works in the physical case too. I'm a lowly sysadmin who has been > told to go 'reboot the Fedora machine' - which one is it?) > > - This is just a modified version of the lab situation case - but when > I'm doing outreach with the Girl Scouts or at local schools, often the > kids go home with a live USB of Inkscape and Gimp and all the software > they learned how to use. We didn't talk about the OS much at all. Maybe > their parents or friends want their own cweet USB key setup too. What > are they using? What do they Google for? How do they figure it out? So how would you solve the problems noted in these situations? > The only Fedora-specific thing on the desktop is the wallpaper, and we > don't put the logo on that (more for legal reasons than anything else - > we openly license the artwork and we can't do that if it contains > trademarks.) I think we both agree that fedora has/should have more differentiators than the artwork, right? --Ray -- desktop mailing list desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop