On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 4:26 PM, Greg DeKoenigsberg <gdk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > So I'm going to ask this question to you, the friendly Fedora marketing > team. > > But first, a history lesson: > > http://lwn.net/Articles/83360/ > > This is pretty much the most accurate depiction of how the great brand > gulf between Fedora and Red Hat started. And in many people's minds, that > gulf has grown to such an extent that many don't have any way of > associating Red Hat with Fedora *at all*. If people don't know there is an association between Fedora and Red Hat I don't think they are paying very much attention. It is already mentioned in the System-About Fedora menu, on the front page of fedoraproject.org, and countless other places. > So let me ask you: > > If, in splash screens for Fedora, we put a tasteful "sponsored by Red Hat" > with the Shadowman logo somewhere small... how would you all feel about > that? Giving credit and thanks to supporters of the project, whether corporate or individuals, is a good thing. I think choosing which to single out might be difficult to do in a fair manner. How many corporations support Fedora by encouraging/allowing employees to contribute? What level of support is required to have your corporate logo on display? I'd like to maybe be a little more clear about the purpose of doing this. If it is what can we do to make people think Red Hat when they hear Fedora then we are thinking about issues not relevant to this goal (although acknowledging contributors is always a great thing to do). Are there other ways to perhaps accomplish this? When I talk with people about Fedora they always learn about the connection it has to Red Hat, they don't always learn about the connection it has with many other commercial enterprises and the more I think about that the more I feel I do a disservice to other valuable contributors already. A summary of information about which corporations contribute and how would be nice for ambassadors to have access to so they can do more to spread the word about the breadth of support Fedora gets from the commercial community. John -- Fedora-marketing-list mailing list Fedora-marketing-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-marketing-list