From e1553f46a9ff77f6c7bd22709df6cc2a4660fb93 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Maria Leonova Date: Mar 30 2016 11:42:57 +0000 Subject: + ‘Flyer/interviews-flyer.svg’ --- diff --git a/Flyer/interviews-flyer.svg b/Flyer/interviews-flyer.svg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9830773 --- /dev/null +++ b/Flyer/interviews-flyer.svg @@ -0,0 +1,76822 @@ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + image/svg+xml + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Who Uses Fedora? + Fedora is a great desktop operating system for designers and other creative folks. Don't just take our word from it - we'll let our users speak for themselves! Editing + Learn More... + www.fedoraproject.org + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + There are so many licenses for free assets! You have to be careful - they may or may not allow for commercial use, modifying the work, or re-distributing the work to other people. In Fedora, we only include software and assets that can be used commercially, modified, and shared. Below is a listing of licenses that Fedora considers acceptable for content / assets. If you'd like to share your work to benefit free software and others, please consider using one of these licenses: Creative Commons Attribution license (CC-BY) Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs (CC-BY-ND) Design Science License (DSL) Distributed Management Task Force License (DMTF) EFF Open Audio License v1(OAL) Ethymonics Free Music License (EFML) Free Art License (Free Art) GeoGratis Licence Agreement (GeoGratis) GNU General Public License (GPL) (for fonts, should have font exception.) LinuxTag Green OpenMusic License (Green OpenMusic) Creative Commons Zero 1.0 Universal (CC0) SIL Open Font License 1.1 (OFL) + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Learn More... + https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing + + We've got more info on these licenses and have even more licenses on our website: + + + Open Clip Art LIbrary + openclipart.org Open Clip Art Library has a searchable library filled exclusively with Public Domain graphics, importable directly from inside Inkscape. + + Open Font Library + openfontlibrary.org/ All of the fonts in the Open Font Library are free software, mostly the OFL license. In many cases the source files for the fonts are available, too! + + Jamendo + jamendo.org Providing Creative Commons musicians with a place to share their work with the world, Jamendo is a great place to find great music. + Freesound + freesound.org Chock full of Creative Commons licensed sound samples, Freesound has a large repository of downloadable sounds you can use for free! + + + Creative Commons + search.creativecommons.org The Creative Commons search engine lets you search the web for CC-licensed media including images, videos, music, and other media. + Wikimedia Commons + commons.wikimedia.org Varied types of media under a variety of open licenses (mostly CC and public domain) are available here. + + + + + + CCMixter + ccmixter.org Just download and enjoy the library of CC-licensed music, or import it into your favorite editing program and post a remix! + Blend Swap + blendswap.com Blend Swap is a collaborative library where Blender 3D artists share their models under Creative Commons licenses. + + + + About Asset Licenses + Or, "Are these *really* free?" + + + The League of Moveable Type + theleagueofmoveabletype.com/ Beautifully-curated, Open Font Licensed fonts in a variety of styles - new fonts are added on a regular basis. + Open Game Art + opengameart.org Game sprites, UI widgets, and other artwork delights can be had at Open Game Art. Allfreely-licensed. + + + + + + SINTEL + + + BIG BUCK BUNNY + bigbuckbunny.org + ELEPHANT'S DREAM + elephantsdream.org + sintel.org + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Wikipedia Bookshelf Project + The Wikimedia Foundation uses Scribus to produce printed materials to attract new Wikipedia contributors and provide training in using Wikipedia. + + Susan G. Komen Foundation + "Pinkitude for Life" © Lorain A. Baird Lorain Baird won the Susan G. Komen Foundation's "Pinkitude" contest, using Inkscape to develop artwork to help raise breast cancer awareness amongst women. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + All of the promotional materials you see here at the Fedora Booth have been produced using free & open source tools. This flyer, the brochure, the stickers, even the stamps... all produced using Inkscape, Gimp, Scribus, and other tools running on the Fedora desktop. + DJ Mumbles + + djmumbles.com + Toronto-basedDJ Mumblescreates tranceand housemixes for hispopular weekly Trancefixion Podcast show using free & open source DJing software called Mixxx. DJ Mumbles is also an active participant in the Mixxx user forums. + This document is available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license, with the exception of project logos, which are + the property of their respective owners. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Robyn, Community Marketeer + + + + Robyn Bergeron is a software project manager from Flagstaff, Arizona with a background in market research. She uses Fedora to meet her day-to-day computing needs and uses it in her marketing work for the Fedora Project - which includes giving conference presentations. Fedora meets a lot of needs in my household. My significant other uses it for his day job as a development platform; my daughter, who is eight, loves to use GIMP to make pictures, Cheese to take endless webcam photos, and Firefox to do some of her website-based homework; my son, who is six, also loves the online games, but is especially in love with the SuperTux game. For me, Fedora meets a lot of my day-to-day needs; I use Firefox to check my web-based email, the notepad to make endless task lists, empathy and pidgin to keep in touch with people through video and instant messaging. For Fedora Marketing, I have everything I need - irssi for chatting online in IRC, Firefox for keeping up with the wiki work that needs to happen for every release, and I make good use of Open Office for making presentations for conferences. + + Fab, Linux Outlaws Podcaster + Fabian A. Scherschel, a university student from Bonn, Germany, is well-known in the Linux community in his role running the Linux Outlaws podcast with Dan Lynch. Fab reveals in this interview that he uses Fedora and the audio tools available in it for the podcast's recording and post-production. I use Audacity for the heavy lifting in post-production and do all the editing in it. Audacity is mainly a wave file editor. From time-to-time I also do some recording or editing in Ardour which is a more full-featured digital audio workstation. We also recorded and mixed the intro music for the podcast using these tools. Since I'm also responsible for all the design and website work around the show, I use Inkscape and The GIMP a lot for creating graphics. I usually draw original designs up in Inkscape which is a vector graphics program and do the processing or general enhancement work in The GIMP since that is a raster-based tool. On top of that, I do all my writing and coding in GEdit which is the best text editor known to mankind and for surfing the web, which I do a lot especially to research topics for the show and to do the show notes, I use Chromium. + Máirín, Artist & Designer + Máirín Duffy, an interaction designer and graphic artist from Boston, uses Fedora exclusively for all of her design work. Websites, GUI mockups, T-shirts, posters, usability tests - she uses Fedora to do it all. She talked to us about her advice for other designers thinking about making the switch to Fedora and other free software. Definitely keep an open mind. Pretty much everything you do using a Mac or Windows using proprietary apps is possible in Fedora. Sometimes things might work a bit differently than you are accustomed to (I'm looking at you, Gimp!) but all the functionality you need is there, and you'll find that the communities around these design applications are really large and rich and there's tons of tutorials, videos, and assets like brushes and palettes available for these applications. Another tip is - try out the the Fedora Design Suite. This is a special edition of Fedora that has many great free & open source creative apps pre-installed for you to discover! There's a great annual conference called Libre Graphics Meeting where the users of these free creative tools and the developers that create them get together for a few days and talk about the interesting things they're accomplishing using the apps, and the future roadmaps for the apps. It's a really energizing event and that community is a great place to find out about new apps coming out and hidden treasures in the feature set of the apps. You'll want to at least check out the materials from that conference (there are full videos of many of the sessions from the last one available online), if not take a trip and see and learn for yourself! +