On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:08 +0200
Michael Meeuwisse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Agreed. I could put something together, but I need pointers on what  
> we want on it.

The goal is to attract people so they get interested
in learning what OGP is about.

The target audience is a very mixed group, probably
10% geeks from the OSS scene, 20% technically interseted
people from IT and EE, 50% people who use the computer
a lot and want to know what this linux thing is about,
20% people who have no idea what linux and/or OSS is
and just come to see what these people are "selling".

We want mainly attrackt the first three groups, as
these are the ones who'd spend money for a good idea.
Especially the third group, as there might be
professionals hiding that might use OGD1 for work.

> I assume the OGP logo on one, OHF on the other, and some text &  
> smaller pictures under it? Do we have slogans? Maybe a third poster  
> with some smaller pictures & text explanations, for when visitors get  
> closer and we're busy talking to other people?

Keep text and pictures big. Although it's A0 size, it gets
very hard to read if you are not standing right in front of it.

For the details, i have still a few hundred of the
flyer made by Terry last year:
http://x.narya.net/static/terry/linuxtag_poster.tgz
Though, maybe we want to update this and print new ones.
 
> I don't have resources to print stuff out though, or "Things" to  
> attach them to so we can place them behind our stand.

Don't worry about this, that's the easiest part.

> Should the  
> background of the posters be white, or doesn't make it a difference  
> whatsoever cost-wise? Do we care cost-wise about the background color?

I don't know whether it makes a difference price wise, but
i don't care much about this. What you should keep in mind
when choosing the background colour is to keep the logos and
text on it well readable. Ie a dark background with brownish
text on it is a bad idea.

Thanks in advance
                                Attila Kinali
-- 
The true CS students do not need to know how to program.
They learn how to abstract the process of programming to
the point of making programmers obsolete.
                -- Jabber in #holo
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