On 4/24/06, Mark Shuttleworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I just did a virgin Dapper install, and the existing themes are by default pretty weak: - the high contrast ones we need for accessibility (though they could be installed with the accessibility metapackage that is going to be done, Henrik is working on that IIRC) - Mist, Smokey, Ocean Dream, Simple, and Traditional... none of them are great Is anyone else here keen to see the progress of the teams working on the three community themes? Are those themes packaged yet? In the meanwhile, perhaps we could save some space by stripping everything other than Human out into a separate package. Mark
I just did a big update on the IndustrialInspirate theme wiki page - It now includes everything that is needed for it to be a very complete and consistent theme. It just needs to be packaged See: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ArtworkTeam/IndustrialInspirate For the information about the theme Can anyone point me in the direction of some information on how to package this up. Especially problematic I think will be the qindustrial theme engine for KDE, which I can currently only find source for (but builds fine on my Dapper box). I assume this kind of thing will be low priority until Dapper+1 as it involves bug testing of 'new' code, etc. However, the theme will still be very good without it. I will try to make a single 'theme' .tar.gz that includes the industrial gtkrc, the icons and the metacity, but I don't know how to go about including the Firefox, Evolution XMMS and GDM themes. Any ideas? I would appreciate a few comments on whether people think we should go with the Dustry theme instead of Industrial. Notably, it has much nicer scrollbars and radiobuttons. The _only_ reason I haven't chosen this is that it uses 3 theme engines. Link: http://www.gnome-look.org/content/show.php?content=23694 Screenshot: http://www.gnome-look.org/content/pre3/23694-3.png Any input is welcome. Who -- ubuntu-art mailing list ubuntu-art@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-art