> On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 01:23:16PM +, Salz, Rich wrote:
> > Tony Arceri sent me a pure-CSS solution that worked and looked similar.
>
> I was about to mention that the website it just text+css.
>
>
> Kurt
FYI: there is another discussion about the OpenSSL logo g
On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 01:23:16PM +, Salz, Rich wrote:
> Tony Arceri sent me a pure-CSS solution that worked and looked similar.
I was about to mention that the website it just text+css.
Kurt
For what it’s worth, during the Website redesign I asked if anyone could
provide a scalable logo so that our website worked on mobile, tablets, etc.
Tony Arceri sent me a pure-CSS solution that worked and looked similar.
The design of the logo was deliberately changed back in (I think) 2015.
The OMC have access to the logo in .xcf, .psd and .png formats.
The new logo had these notes associated with it:
This is the official OpenSSL logo.
It was created in Adobe Photoshop 8.0 with the fonts Adobe Palatino
Bold
> According to that site, it used to be at
>
> http://openssl.com/images/openssl-logo.png
>
Thanks to the Wayback Machine, nothing gets lost: Here is the historical
OpenSSL Logo:
https://web.archive.org/web/20141231112717/http://openssl.com/images/openssl-logo.png
Matthias
Well then, if Tomáš manages to convert it to SVG and if there is no problem
with the font, you may raise a pull request. (BTW: what is the font's name?)
Please note that you might have to enlarge the bounding box to increase
the border around the text. Because GitHub will automatically scale the
Right, there is no 3D.
Regards,
Paul Yang
> On Feb 27, 2020, at 6:54 PM, Tomas Mraz wrote:
>
> On Thu, 2020-02-27 at 11:28 +0100, Matthias St. Pierre wrote:
>> Thank you for the clarification, Mark.
>>
>> So this means we have some artistic freedom in choosing the logo?
>>
>> Personally, I'm
On Thu, 2020-02-27 at 11:28 +0100, Matthias St. Pierre wrote:
> Thank you for the clarification, Mark.
>
> So this means we have some artistic freedom in choosing the logo?
>
> Personally, I'm not sure whether we really should aim at restoring
> the historic logo. IMHO this ornate font with 3D ap
Sorry for linking a german page (although the video is english).
This seems to be the corresponding english version.
https://googleblog.blogspot.com/2015/09/google-update.html
On 27.02.20 11:28, Matthias St. Pierre wrote:
Thank you for the clarification, Mark.
So this means we have some art
Thank you for the clarification, Mark.
So this means we have some artistic freedom in choosing the logo?
Personally, I'm not sure whether we really should aim at restoring
the historic logo. IMHO this ornate font with 3D appearance reminds
me of the nineties and has slightly gone out of style. J
On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 9:31 AM Matthias St. Pierre
wrote:
> Because after all, the shape of the logo is an
> essential part of the OpenSSL 'trade mark'.
Although the current website logo as of January 2020 was used as the
specimen to show our use of the trademark at renewal time, our
official tr
inc/screen.css#L131-L158
>>
>> While I'm not opposed to brush up the OpenSSL logo, I think this
>> can't
>> be done simply be replacing it on the fly. I think this requires a
>> general
>> discussion among the team members and finally an OMC decis
is HelveticaNeue-Light.
>
> https://github.com/openssl/web/blob/master/inc/screen.css#L131-L158
> <https://github.com/openssl/web/blob/master/inc/screen.css#L131-L158>
>
> While I'm not opposed to brush up the OpenSSL logo, I think this can't
> be done simply b
please clarify whether this is the
current official OpenSSL logo? And if it is, point us to a location where the
original file can be found?
Matthias
On 27.02.20 10:31, Matthias St. Pierre wrote:
The openssl.svg was chosen to match the current logo at
https://www.openssl.org/
as close as
https://github.com/openssl/web/blob/master/inc/screen.css#L131-L158
>
> While I'm not opposed to brush up the OpenSSL logo, I think this
> can't
> be done simply be replacing it on the fly. I think this requires a
> general
> discussion among the team members and finally an
The openssl.svg was chosen to match the current logo at
https://www.openssl.org/
as close as possible. According to the style sheet, the font of the logo
is HelveticaNeue-Light.
https://github.com/openssl/web/blob/master/inc/screen.css#L131-L158
While I'm not opposed to brush up the Op
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