I follow this list for some time now and aparently one big question seems 
unanswered:

what is the proper function of the start.fpo, first page when a user starts the 
browser?

IMO it is rather clear that the main function is aimed at the novice user, 
assisting her/him
- to like Fedora
- get help easily
- get background information on Fedora, Linux, FOSS

more experienced users will change the start page to a personal setting 
anyway...

I agree that the present start.fpo can be seen as a bit over-complete, has a 
lot of scary infos and links on it, at least for novice users I guess -- it 
took me too rather long to start using IRC ;) and indeed Firefox already has a 
standard search bar.

reducing start.fpo to the essential minimum a novice user might appreciate I 
very much like https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/File:Start.fpo-mockup-elad.png

+ not only an extended search field, but very useful options to search the 
package database (Fedora, can I do the things I want to do with it? how is it 
called?) and wiki (backgrounds)
+ links to the user guide, ask.fedora and a place to join
-/+ the announcements Fedora weekly are rather techish, but a new Fedora user 
can also be a techie

the bears I don't know but they surely underline what is in the balloon above 
and they probably look beter than a rough drawn Tux.

novice users might have questions about what software to use. they simply don't 
know the names of open source alternatives. pointing to a website like 
www.osalt.com might help them converting. 

on the help-thing I'd suggest linking to ask fedora as well as to 
fedoraforum.org because this is an excellent place to get help and be treated 
with respect (in all 3 years with stupid questions I never got flamed). the 
only problem here is that fedoraforum.org is officially not affiliated with 
Fedora, but when no one has a problem with it...

on the search engine on start.fpo I argumented some time ago to use DuckDuckGo 
instead because it doesn't track you and Google has some strangish policies 
regarding privacy and openness. not directly something Fedora stands for. on 
the other hand if Google lowers the threshold maybe we should skip politics...

for further background reading and exploring Linux i'd suggest links to 
fedoraproject.org (you can get a new/different version) and www.linux.com 
because it has some good pages on software and support 
(http://www.linux.com/learn)

BFN

-- 
//meine
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