Announcing the Tango Project: Making Open-Source Software Beautiful

Example Tango Icon

Today at the Gnome Summit in Boston in the MIT Stata Centre, Jakub Steiner of Novell and I announced the Tango Project. We’ve been working on it for a few months now, just getting the basics figured out before we started bragging.

The Tango Project is a collaborative effort of a variety of free/open-source software designers and artists to work towards unifying the visual style of the free (mostly Linux) desktop.

To start, we have:

  1. Base Icon Library – Most of the work here has been done by Jakub Steiner. It’s a beautiful icon set that aims to be relatively at-home on Windows, Mac OS X, and define a strong base style for the Linux desktop.
  2. Style Guide – A work in progress, the Tango style guide works to create a color scheme and other key visual guidelines for creating Tango-style icons.
  3. Standard Icon Naming SpecificationRodney Dawes has done much of the work to get a common icon naming specification to make it possible to create an icon theme that can work on a variety of different platforms (Gnome, KDE, etc.). There are utilities to map the new Tango icons to the existing icon names on current Gnome and KDE systems.

It’s been fun to participate on the Tango project. I hope others join us and help make the free desktop (more) beautiful.

 

Long Now Foundation Seminars

Stuart Brand’s peculiar Long Now Foundation has been hosting a series of seminars on long term thinking in the San Francisco area over the last couple of years. The list of speakers is impressive and most of the talks are available for download in Ogg Vorbis or MP3 format.

Particularly good talks include Roger Kennedy’s Political History of North America from 25,000 BC to 12,000 AD (Ogg Vorbis, MP3) from which I learned for the first time of the remarkable Pyramid-like structures in Illinois. Paul Hawken also gives a great talk (Ogg Vorbis, MP3). I had the pleasure of hearing Hawken speak here in Charlottetown a few years ago where he chided us for having potatoes from California in the local supermarket (our province is famous for it’s local potato production).

The latest talk (just last week) is by Ray Kurzweil (Ogg Vorbis), who’s ideas I wrote about in the early days of this weblog.

The series is worth following and the foundation does a great service in its organization and free online distribution.

 

Switchfoot Laments the Copy Protection on their CD

In the forums on the Sony Music website, Tim Foreman of the band Switchfoot talks about the copy protection on their CD:

Hello friends,
my heart is heavy with this whole copy-protection thing. Many PC users have posted problems that they have had importing the new songs (regular disc only, not the dual disc) into programs such as Itunes. Let me first say that as a musician AND as a music fan, I agree with the frustration that has been expressed. We were horrified when we first heard about the new copy-protection policy that is being implemented by most major labels, including Sony (ours), and immediately looked into all of our options for removing this from our new album. Unfortunately, this is the new policy for all new major releases from these record companies. It is heartbreaking to see our blood, sweat, and tears over the past 2 years blurred by the confusion and frustration surrounding this new technology. It is also unfortunate when bands such as ourselves, Foo Fighters, Coldplay, etc… (just a few of the new releases with copy protection) are the target of this criticism, when there is no possible way to avoid this new industry policy.

He goes on to explain how to (relatively easily) circumvent the copy protection on their discs.

 

What I did Last Summer (London & Paris)

After we got married this summer my wife and I quickly fled the country and headed to the Olde Continent. We spent about a week in London and about a week in Paris. We took over 900 photos of all of the beautiful and touristy sites with our wedding-gift-new Canon SD300 digital camera.

From these 900+ photos, I’ve distilled a collection of a little over 300 that are worth seeing (lots of blurry shots and duplicates). Still, I can’t imaging people who aren’t my mom wanting to look at 300 shots of our European vacation. Here, then, is a list of some of the vacation (and photographic) highlights:

The trip was great and we saw all kinds of wonderful sights. We were all touristed out by the end of it though – our next vacation will involve a lot more sitting and a way fewer lineups.

 

Fedora Logo Development Process

Fedora Logo process

Matt Munoz, a designer at Red Hat, has posted an interested walk-through of the development of a logo/visual-identity concept for Fedora Linux. It’s fascinating to see the process and justification behind a logo idea like this.

This isn’t an official logo yet. It has been proposed and is being discussed by the Fedora community. Everyone, including myself, will have an opinion (and criticism), but when you have great work like this done, you should say “Thanks” and go with it.

Here’s a quick preview of some of the process – you can also see the complete process.

Nice work Matt and the rest of the design team.

 

CBC Radio 3 Podcast in Ogg Vorbis

CBC Radio 3 Podcast (now with Ogg Vorbis!)

Despite having locked-out their employees, the CBC continues to do cool things (somehow).

The CBC Radio 3 Podcast features Canadian emerging artists who have given the CBC the ok to share their music online. If that wasn’t cool enough, the show is now available in the free and open-source audio format Ogg Vorbis (read a bit about why this matters). Also see the Digg.com post on the subject.

Nice work, CBC Radio 3. My music-geek and my open-source-geek selves giving each other a geeky high-five.

The CBC has also had an Ogg Vorbis stream of the main CBC Radio 1 and CBC Radio 2 stations available for a while now.

Here’s a clip from the show with a great promo for the Ogg Vorbis format (worth a listen):

 

Using MediaWiki to Build a “normal” Website

Despite the misleading title, this is not a tutorial on how to use MediaWiki to build a website. Rather, it is an observation that MediaWiki can be used to build sites that look and feel like tradition (non-Wiki) websites.

What the heck is a “wiki”?

First, some background. A wiki is a special kind of website that anyone can edit. Pages on a wiki-powered website have an “edit” button, and anyone can make a change. MediaWiki is one of many software systems that can be used to power wiki sites. MediaWiki is most well known as the software behind the Wikipdia.

When I first started playing with MediaWiki to do some visual customization for the Mozilla wiki, I felt a little bit like I was wandering lost through a jungle of PHP, HTML, and CSS. However, after stripping out a lot of the features I didn’t want or need, I started to get the hang of visually customizing the MediaWiki interface.

I’ve since done some minor skin/theme design for our silverorange wiki, and the WikiPEI site, though I hope to improve both in the coming months.

What I’ve found most interesting about MediaWiki is that people are starting to use it to build “normal” non-wiki websites. Pages can be locked-down, so only certain users have editing privledges. This essentially merges the administration tools of the website into the front-end of the site. This merger has the advantage of making administration easier and more direct. However, it can also make the experience of browsing the site (as a non-editor) and bit less enjoyable (hence the attitude that “wikis are ugly and weird”).

While I’m not about to advocate MediaWiki as the ideal content management system for all websites, it is an interesting use of the technology. Some of the design folks in the Linux group at Novell have been pumping out some pretty slick looking websites based on MediaWiki. Here are some examples of their work:

Examples of MediaWiki-powered “Normal” Websites

Hula website screenshot
Hula Project
Hula is a free/open-source calendar/mail server. The Hula Project website was the first site I found that had a traditional stable website feel to it, but was built on MediaWiki. The header is bold and attractive, and the primary navigation is dead-simple.

Mono website screenshot
The Mono Project
Recently redesigned, the Mono site has a light, fun, cartoon-y feel to it. If it weren’t for the “edit” links sprinkled throuout, you’d never know it was a wiki.

Bealge website screenshot
Beagle Project
Beagle is a desktop search tool for Linux. The Beagle website follows the model of the Hula site, with a bold header, and simple navigation.

Are there other good examples of sites powered by MediaWiki (or other wikis) that look and feel like beautiful websites, rather that weird plain old wikis?