How about Cerberus (F10), then we could move to Janus (F11). On Nov 13, 2007 2:05 PM, Marc Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Jeff Spaleta" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > On Nov 12, 2007 10:58 PM, Nicu Buculei <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Jakub 'Livio' Rusinek wrote: > >> > Simply - Owl, Nightbird, Humming or Bird :) . > >> > >> I absolutely hate to be "that guy" but... the name decision is not ours > >> (Art Team) to make and traditionally now is also too early for it. > > > > Is it too early? I think there are proposed changes for the > > development process which would put the "naming" process earlier in > > part to get the art team time to have the option to build a theme > > associated with the codename. > > > > Regardless of when it happens, there are established rules for the > > name game, which I assume people in this thread are not aware of. > > Names between releases must relate. Release N+1 must be named such > > that releaser N+1 relates to N, such that releases N+1 and N-1 are not > > similarly related. So we can for example just keep picking city names > > or flower names over and over again. > > > > The rules for F9 as I understand them are: > > The relationship that connects Moonshine and Werewolf cannot be re-used. > > The F9 name and werewolf must share are "both are" relationship. > > The F9 name and moonshine must not share a "both are" relationship > > You also should provide an obvious next relationship that can be used > > to connect the name to F9 to F10 > > > > The "Unicorn" example I provided follows the name game rules. I stated > > the N+1 to N relationship explicitly. Both a unicorn and a werewolf > > are mythical creatures whereas moonshine is not. > > I also hinted at the next relationship that can be used to move beyond > > unicorn. Unicorn was the mascot for my high school, so for F10 you > > could move from unicorn to any high school mascot that was not a > > mystical creature. Though that's actually not a good out. A better out > > would be Tom Cruise movie co-stars (a unicorn was in the movie > > Legend). > > > > Names like "galaxy" or "night bird" need to be given in the context of > > the "N+1 and N are a something, but N+1 and N-1 are not a > > something" rule. The naming isn't random, but its constrained by how > > clever we are coming up with relationships between the names. > > > > -jef > > I was not aware of the guidelines you note above. That being said, I > think that Bellerophon could fit, since it is a mythical character and > could then lead us into the domain of sci-fi, which is then wide > open... > > Of course, the Six Degrees of Tom Cruise would lead us into some > interesting territory... > > :-) > > Marc > > _______________________________________________ > Fedora-art-list mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-art-list > -- Aaron Bowman, Fedora Docs Wannabe gpg fingerprint: 2DD4 471F 12F4 FB93 986F 2B41 17DB 3139 CBF6 2385
_______________________________________________ Fedora-art-list mailing list [email protected] http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-art-list
