Description: For anyone that has been checking out a new distro that caught my attention, here is a replacement icon. It is a little more crystal-like. It will probably be included with the first official release of Yoper GNU/Linux.
I hope someone answers this. How does one go about changing the launch menu button to this icon. I can't quite figure out how to change it from the "K" to another icon.
Yoper does have some drawbacks on eye-candy currently, but we can always dress KDE up however we want. Andreas (from Yoper) is not a graphics artist, but has compiled a really impressive linux distro. It is tailored to the i686 architecture and has taken an overall minimalist approach, despite having large programs like KDE, Mozilla, and OpenOffice.org. If you use it, you will probably be impressed with the speed.
Yoper has one of the best package management systems, based on Slackware's .tgz, but it can also use rpm's and deb's.
I'm really impressed with it overall, and I'm sure that the graphics will get better by the time they reach 1.0 (i.e., by the donation of improved images from users like me).
Ratings & Comments
7 Comments
Yoper is a good distro, but logo is terrible
I hope someone answers this. How does one go about changing the launch menu button to this icon. I can't quite figure out how to change it from the "K" to another icon.
At last a good New Zealand distro. :-) I am going to download it and try it out soon.
marbles icon builder?
I didn't use any sort of Icon builder for this, Instead I just used the GIMP to add glows, make alpha fades, and create a drop shadow.
these graphics at yoper web site (all inckluding screenshots ) are terrible... the logo is also ugly but this implementation makes it lookable ;)
Yoper does have some drawbacks on eye-candy currently, but we can always dress KDE up however we want. Andreas (from Yoper) is not a graphics artist, but has compiled a really impressive linux distro. It is tailored to the i686 architecture and has taken an overall minimalist approach, despite having large programs like KDE, Mozilla, and OpenOffice.org. If you use it, you will probably be impressed with the speed. Yoper has one of the best package management systems, based on Slackware's .tgz, but it can also use rpm's and deb's. I'm really impressed with it overall, and I'm sure that the graphics will get better by the time they reach 1.0 (i.e., by the donation of improved images from users like me).