GNOME Identity Posters And A Few More

The marketing list has been discussing the creation of posters for volunteers to print and take with them wherever they present the GNOME project, typically at conferences and other public events of the same kind. I’ve created a few which I’ll review in more details. What they all have in common is:

  1. They were all designed for A0-size paper. That’s 1189 × 841 mm (46 ¾ × 33 in) which is pretty big. However, since the width to height ratio of ISO paper sizes remains the same within a given series – A0, A1, A2, A3, … – the posters should be usable at smaller sizes too.
  2. All are black and white and therefore cheap to print.
  3. I used the GNOME logo on all of them. This may mean that officially releasing those posters would have to be cleared through the GNOME Foundation. Or it may not; I don’t know. I went for “shoot first; ask questions later” on that one.
  4. All of them would need additional “fine print” information like the URL to GNOME’s site and perhaps the Foundation’s address.

Identity posters: these have no other purpose than to communicate GNOME’s presence somewhere. There’s barely any designing here… shame on me.

Poster 1: Standard GNOME logo Poster 2: Fancy GNOME logo

Augmented identity posters: same as above but with a little bit of text giving the briefest of introductions to the GNOME project. The text is loosely based on wgo’s “What is GNOME?” It could easily be replaced with something better.

“The GNOME project provides two things: the GNOME desktop, an intuitive and attractive desktop environment for corporate and home users, and the GNOME development platform, an extensive framework for building applications. Volunteers, software developers, documentation writers, artists, translators, all work together to make GNOME easy to use, accessible, powerful, innovative and just plain great. Corporations have also joined in the effort and now provide additional resources for the project as well as professional support for GNOME users and developers. Thanks to the GNOME project hundreds of thousands of people worldwide have successfully begun using free software.”

Poster 3: Standard GNOME logo with text Poster 4: Fancy GNOME logo with text

Bonus gizmo poster: Say you’re selling GNOME t-shirts or you have a list of presentations to announce… use a marker and the bonus gizmo poster™ and make your own poster. ;-)

Poster 5: Ruled poster with GNOME logo at top

Whimsical posters: These last two I designed for myself more than for public use. It was suggested on the marketing list that posters could have some kind of slogan on them which is not a bad idea except that, as far as I know, there isn’t an official “slogan” for the GNOME project. This didn’t prevent me however from thinking about what more elaborate posters could look like.

The “gentleman’s desktop” idea is something I’ve read somewhere though I cannot remember if it was on a mailing list, in somebody’s blog or in an interview. I really like the idea though I realize of course that it is sexist and unpleasantly plutocratic. Bear in mind then that it is not part of the “official” proposal but merely the result of my indulging my elitist European male fiber. ;-)

The “official desktop of happy people” idea I’m very fond of and I believe it’s a communication avenue worth exploring. It takes the focus away from the technical and political issues to present instead the human and affective aspects of the project. Usability, accessibility, i18n have all been successfully integrated into the development of GNOME at a technical level. That’s an important factor of GNOME’s success and something which should be emphasized because users can relate to it as individuals and as members of a group. Rationally convincing people that using GNOME is a good decision is great. Not having to convince them of the same because they are emotionally drawn to it wouldn’t be bad either.

Poster 6: GNOME: A Gentleman's Desktop Poster 7: GNOME: Official Desktop of Happy People

The text at the bottom of both posters is dummy text by the way. If you’re interested in downloading the PDF versions of all 7 posters, they’re available at www.viralata.net/gnome/promotion/.

Marketing GNOME vs. Marketing GTK+

Today is a historic date for Free/Open Source software. It is the day Mozilla Firefox 1.0 was released to the world. Internet Explorer, its “competitor,” is still the most widely used browser on the net but Firefox, which has already conquered the hearts and minds of web developers, is also slowly making its way into the hard drives of regular people. More importantly I believe that it is also acting as an ambassador for F/OS software. It is showing that F/OS software is alive, relevant, and credible. So while I’m glad that today the world was made aware that it has the option not to use a crappy browser, I’m also especially happy to see the idea that software is not just whatever Microsoft made Dell or Gateway ship with their computers strengthened by this particular event.

And now, on to GNOME stuff. These past few days I’ve had no time to work on the GNOME marketing tasks I had set for myself. But I’ve had time to consider some ways to reach a broader audience and one thing became clear to me while reflecting on Firefox and OpenOffice’s recent good fortunes: the best way to market GNOME is to forget about marketing it.

Like GNOME, Firefox and OpenOffice are useful, functional, well designed, usable pieces of software – with varying degrees of success of course but that’s not the point. GNOME is unique though in that it works on operating systems which, though full of qualities, are minority systems. Microsoft Windows has roughly 95% of the desktop market and Mac OS X 3%. Linux, the BSDs and Solaris – all GNOME systems which I’ll just refer to as Unices from now on – have the rest.

The good news is that much of the market, Microsoft’s share specifically, is up for grabs. Linux has shown that it could occupy a significant percentage of the market in the server space. Many believe that it could do it again with the desktop market. I, of course, believe it too. The bad news… well, I suppose it is that there’s a long road ahead. The bad news for GNOME is that it can’t go anywhere on its own and that it’s dependent on the success of its host operating systems. That unfortunate fact is something the GNOME marketing team cannot ignore and which will always limit it. So what can it do?

I believe that it should shift its efforts from marketing GNOME to marketing GTK+. The “GIMP Toolkit” happens to be one of the elements of GNOME’s technical foundation but it’s also more than that. It’s a complete multi-platform toolkit. Clearly only a very specific segment of the population has any use for a GUI toolkit but what matters is that this segment exists within the full desktop operating system market and not only within the 2% or so of the current GNOME host operating system market. By promoting GTK+ the GNOME marketing team would increase its target audience significantly and instantly. That’s already something to consider. But there’s more.

The GNOME marketing team ought to think about how to best use its limited resources: it could try to market GNOME and find itself selling Unices instead or it could market GTK+ and use that initiative to show off GNOME and draw people to it. Scenario #1 involves getting into the complexities of selling a platform radically different from the dominant one. That means addressing issues like hardware support, switching costs, transfer of custom software, and all that icky stuff. I believe that’s a job best left to vendors. Let RedHat, Novell, or Sun do the heavy lifting since they can’t afford not to do it.

Scenario #2 involves promoting something the team is familiar with and which it can manage. For the most part it’s about developers talking to developers whereas in the first scenario you’d have to address a wide audience – managers, admins, end-users, etc. – on a variety of topics. So not only would the former path require greater sophistication and research, it would also require more volunteers and more efforts. With the GTK+ option, the message is simpler and probably truer to GNOME’s core constituency.

Marketing GTK+ is not only important because of the interest it could create in GNOME; it’s also crucial because it will increase the number of people writing for the platform. While GTK+ is not “the GNOME development platform,” it is the closest thing to it and bridging the gap between the two will be easier than having people making the jump all at once. The importance of GNOME and GTK+ bindings in reaching this goal should be obvious to anyone familiar with the platform. That is certainly the case of the Mono guys who have, better than anyone else I believe, understood the necessity to create a GNOME-friendly multi-platform culture. To some they might have made controversial political decisions. To me, they have adopted exactly the right kind of attitude.

This proposal is obviously a bit twisted. I’d be asking people to work on one thing when they’re really interested in working on another. But I’m convinced that it’s the most efficient way to go: GTK+’s target audience is much much much greater than GNOME’s at the moment, it is homogenous, the marketing team is familiar with it, and as for the message to communicate, focusing on GTK+ is probably much more straightforward than dealing with GNOME and the platform issues.

National Desktop League

I’ve always been attracted to sports imagery. I find it daring – if sometimes brash and tacky – and expressive especially in its typography. It’s a guilty pleasure: large commercial lettering, loud colors… it’s far from what I’m normally drawn to. But I admire people who can design that way and who are not afraid of overdoing it. Stylistically it looks to me like a direct derivative from old-fashion commercial sign painting for which I have a soft spot.

When I was a kid, right across the street from my elementary school, there was a commercial sign shop. It closed down a long time ago but I still remember exactly what it looked like, its dark green façade and its beautiful hand-painted white letters on the window. I also remember my father explaining to me what that guy’s job was and how great it was that someone could still make a living that way. I think he too has a soft spot for hand lettering which he passed on to me.

I don’t know for sure but I’m guessing that sign painting is now a lost art in France. Living in Brazil though I have the privilege to see it alive everyday. The streets here are full of hand painted signs: store front advertising, commercial banners suspended above and across the streets – it’s illegal to hang banners in the streets in Belo Horizonte but it’s still done – political signs, etc… They’re everywhere. Though most of them are unremarkable some do stand out, often more by their size and color than by the quality of the lettering. Maybe I’m a complete weirdo but I do enjoy walking passed a giant blue “A” or a huge red “S”

But back to my initial point… I’ve been thinking for while now about experimenting with replacing the modern, glossy, and minimalist look of computer graphics with the loud and popular aesthetics of expensive team sports. What would that be like? Something like this perhaps:

GNOME T-shirt, front side, red with dark green lettering

The GNOME Marketing list is discussing ways to define and reach its target audience. But what are we going to propose to the public to identify GNOME visually and to connect with it? I know it’s a side issue, mere promotion, but it’s a stimulating one for me. I’ve proposed in the past to create GNOME posters which belong stylistically to the standard sleek computer graphic design genre. I didn’t do it to imitate anything or anyone. It just came out that way because that minimalism is a part of me. But after it I also felt compelled to try something different which challenged not only my designing habits but also my assumption about the way to communicate my enthusiasm and my hopes for GNOME.

GNOME T-shirts, back side, name and number of GNOME 'players'

Now, if only CafePress offered dark red t-shirts!