No author of any theme is remotely aware of whether or not their submission will make it into the final product.
I don't know that, if I turn one of my themes into a full-out GTK with Emerald and Metacity, my time will have been worth it. While we are all aware that Mark will decide the final theme, how do I know if Mark will see it? How much effort should I put into the theme, vs how much effort should I put into the mailing list or the Wiki, making sure the right people will see it? Maybe everyone would be much happier if there were just some sort of list - or anything, that says "The list of everything Mark is guaranteed to consider", the list the Art Team will push to Mark first as their best and finest selection. A list where at least you will probably know you've made it as even an alternate choice. Mark will have the final say, so where do we find out what Mark wants? Can he be given a selection of what we have now, so we can get his commentary? I personally don't want to turn anything into a real theme because I don't know what will be considered. If a clear set of rules is established (must be a working GTK theme, with Metacity and where applicable, Emerald files, etc) and I'm told "Hey - if you make X into a live theme, X will be on that list - we will put you there" then I'll make the full GTK, and I'll make the Emerald, and I'll kick into overdrive to make everything you'll need because I know it'll be seriously considered. Right now all I know is that Basic Ideals got public attention, Union was given a union-like GTK to develop on, and then this Gelatin thing came out from left field and now I have a third theme I've started because I think thats what the Art team likes... I have two weeks before I'm serving in the Canadian Air Force, I have two weeks before I'm gone for 3 months, and possible well over a year if I don't get permission to get a new laptop. I don't expect to make the next default, and I don't know who will - but among this mess of message boards and Wiki articles how is anyone expected to feel like they've made it farther than a few good comments? -Ken Vermette On Jan 2, 2008 9:06 PM, Justin Rogers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Jan 2, 2008 6:47 PM, Troy James Sobotka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > There is no war. > > > > There never has been war. > > > > There is only sabdfl and his way that he chooses to run > > his company. I applaud his patience, monetary input, and > > brilliance in this light. > > > > Voting is also irrelevant. The poorly conceived Edgy > > byproduct achieved approximately 75% voter approval > > over the existing artwork of Dapper. It made no difference, > > and nor should it. > > > > > the only thing to fear from a vote is the reality that your > > contributions are not > > > as popular as you would like them to be. > > > > And given enough votes, all things will median. > > > > Sincerely, > > TJS > > > > > > -- > > ubuntu-art mailing list > > [email protected] > > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-art > > > > > Dude you are just spinning your wheels, because I don't understand how > nything up to this point can be called brilliant. I don't claim to know what > to implement to get this project back on its feet. But the fact is that we > are more then two months into a six month release cycle without anything to > show for it. > > -- > ubuntu-art mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-art > > -- -Ken Vermette
-- ubuntu-art mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-art
