On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 18:35, Thomas C Gilliard satel...@bendbroadband.com
wrote:
I also wish that the range of rim colors available for the XO choice in F1
Neighborhood would distinguish what Distribution they are based on...
I'm just curious, but how is this relevant to the end user? Most
Hi
Why don't you ask some children what colors they would like? Offer a number of
choices in both warm colors and cool colors and combos.
BTW...dumb question coming...what does a.sl.o mean? I googled it and all I got
was SugarLabs and something for adult dyslectics, ar yoo a slo red.er?
On Sat, 21 Mar 2009, Caryl Bigenho wrote:
Hi
Why don't you ask some children what colors they would like? Offer a number
of choices in both warm colors and cool colors and combos.
BTW...dumb question coming...what does a.sl.o mean? I googled it and all I
got was SugarLabs and something
a.sl.o - activities.sugarlabs.org
I'm anti-contraction but also lazy about typing it all out sometimes
at first I thought it was an object code file .o
On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 5:39 PM, Caryl Bigenho cbige...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi
Why don't you ask some children what colors they would
Hi Caryl,
a.sl.o is short for activities.sugarlabs.org. Its where you can get new
activities for sugar.
Its a good idea to ask kids what colors they like, but we're limited to
the color palette attached. (I tried to find the link on the wiki, but I
have no idea where it is.)
Josh
Caryl
I agree,
ASLO is easier to type too.
-Josh
David Farning wrote:
FWIW,
We might want to start branding activities.sugarlab.org as also or
ASLO instead of a.sl.o.
Within the mozilla developer community AMO (addons.mozilla.org) is very
strong.
Many consider CPAN as the 'killer app' for
On 21 Mar 2009, at 16:57, Josh Williams wrote:
Hi Caryl,
a.sl.o is short for activities.sugarlabs.org. Its where you can get
new activities for sugar.
Its a good idea to ask kids what colors they like, but we're limited
to the color palette attached. (I tried to find the link on the
Hi...
Maybe it's my Mac, but I find it very difficult to read the small white letters
on the light turquoise-blue background.
Caryl
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