Linux had that architecture like poster - a big circle in the middle with
lots of pieces around the edges. I think the poster was black. Anyway,
people loved it - even people that had no technical experience.

Stormy

On Tue, Oct 14, 2008 at 5:47 AM, Calum Benson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> On 14 Oct 2008, at 11:13, Dave Neary wrote:
>
>  Hi Brian,
>>
>> Brian Cameron wrote:
>>
>>> Does anybody have a good presentation on the overall structure of GNOME
>>> architecture?  Are good general GNOME presentations stored somewhere for
>>> reference?
>>>
>>
>> I'm not sure what you mean - but I'm not sure why anyone would give a
>> presentation on the overall structure of GNOME architecture.
>>
>
> I think (though I'm not sure) that we're looking to give a presentation to
> some new QA folks who are unfamiliar with the GNOME stack.  And the last
> time we did that we were only supporting GNOME 2.6, rather than the 2.24
> we'll be supporting soon... so our materials could use some updating, and it
> would just be nice if somebody else had already done the work :)
>
> (There's some slightly more up-to-date information on <
> http://live.gnome.org/GnomeArchitecture/Overview>, but even that only
> takes us up to GNOME 2.16.)
>
> Cheeri,
> Calum.
>
> --
> CALUM BENSON, Usability Engineer       Sun Microsystems Ireland
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]            GNOME Desktop Team
> http://blogs.sun.com/calum             +353 1 819 9771
>
> Any opinions are personal and not necessarily those of Sun Microsystems
>
>
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