- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
StickerPack has been updated with Rhino Linux, TrueNAS Open Storage, and the new logo for MX Linux!
Show your #distro pride with a “Powered by” Linux sticker for your computer! Created in #Inkscape. 70 distros represented, from Alma Linux to Zorin. Just unhide the layer you want and export or print.
Don’t see your favorite distro? It’s probably because I can’t find a print quality logo to use. Links to print-quality logos appreciated.
#linux #stickers #poweredbylinux
Velcro ones for distro hoppers
Why not just “Powered by Linux” and slab a penguin on the machine?
+1 for Tux
Tux is included
Tux is included
deleted by creator
You might not like it, but this is what peak performance looks like
Torvalds was looking for something fun and sympathetic to associate with Linux, and he felt that a slightly fat penguin sitting down after having eaten a great meal perfectly fit the bill
Seems like nothing with dignity was intended … which fits perfectly. 🙃
May I shamelessly plug my alteranate design?
I picked it up, lost motivation, dropped it, again and again, so it’s in a sorry state (shoot, I am in a sorry state), but here goes:Source (petty much abandoned “for now”)
Nice job! And sometimes, things are just “done,” not “abandoned.”
Glad you like it!
It’s not so much the icon itself, but more what I wanted to do with it, I was asked if there was a Plymouth theme with that so I thought to make it in Blender and then generate the Plymouth animation, but I never completely succeeded because I didn’t understand how it works so in my tests the aspect ratio was all off, I still don’t know who I could ask for help with that
Looks quite good. Wouldn’t mind this as the logo
TuxRacer is the bees knees.
Don’t listen to the naysayers. This is fun and people like seeing similar-minded dorks out and about. Having said that, I wouldn’t put some business logo on my computer. But a community distro, why not? Been there done that.
No thanks. I hate visible branding.
I looked for a lazy way to get myself a Tux sticker and found this pack of stickers for $1
https://www.stickermule.com/products/unixstickers-pro-pack
Bargain!
Can confirm this is real and a really good deal. Got the pack and have put a couple on my main uni laptop. 10/10 I love how it makes me a walking stereotype!
Do you use arch btw?
Omgggg how did yu kno x3
I use Debian btw
This incident will be reported btw
But you can be in my suduoer’s file if you want… (Debian rizz) :-P
Just ordered it, thanks for posting the link lol
deleted by creator
It’s even free international shipping and VAT (25% in my country) is included in the price.
Crazy.
deleted by creator
Where I live (ymmv) shipping is 50cent if you ship a looooot of stuff, vat is like 18 cents, that means they need to turn a profit on 32 cents, dividing 32 by 10 we obtain 3.2 cents a sticker, wow. (just bought them btw)
Why not export them rather than requiring people to install Inkscape just to view the files?
my brother in christ, SVG is a universal vector format
I’ll rephrase. Why require an editor? The most common viewers of SVG do not support layers.
Just open it in your webbrowser, even most image viewers (I think including eog and xviewer) can open them as images.
Inkscape isn’t necessary. Any app that can open SVG files should work.
I’ll rephrase. Why require an editor? The most common viewers of SVG do not support layers
I suppose that I’m just too lazy after spending tens of hours locating 71 different high resolution logo files, a bunch of different word marks, researching and installing various typefaces, creating layers, groups, precisely aligning and resizing stuff 71 different times, converting all the text into outlines, hiding all the layers, creating a repository, uploading to GitHub, and then offering it to anyone for free.
That’s what I was questioning. Why do do the work but then not make it accessible?
It’s a similar thought to this topic: https://lemmy.world/post/3179113
It IS accessible. SVG is a standard format that can be opened by any number of different programs across multiple operating systems.
Just because you chose not to install one of those programs is not my problem.
I don’t get mad when I need to open a pdf but I don’t have a pdf reader. I install a fucking pdf reader.
Get off of your horse, dude.
Remind me and I could probably fix separate files for every icon. Shouldn’t be too bad with slices in Affinity Designer.
Edit: I opened a pull request.
Perfect!
deleted by creator
What image viewer are you using? Both Gwenview and Loupe display Inkscape Layers flawlessly for me
Arch people, assemble! (I use Mint btw)
OP, FYI, there’s no green code button on mobile 🙂
Are you going to print stickers from your phone?
Yes? For example, my local print shop only prints files from email. Makes it a little hard to download and attach to an email on my phones email app if the button is missing on mobile.
Or sometimes I don’t have access to my PC and I’ll downlod stuff to my phone to transfer to my PC later.
Good point!
If you want a specific svg, you can download it from its own page.
For example, from here you can tap the the dots top-right and download the file.Good point!
If you want a specific svg, you can download it from its own page.
For example, from here you can tap the the dots top-right and download the file.Maybe this helps?
Where’s the GNU part?
/s
Yeah why not also add the firmware blobs to the label as well. Without them, your device wouldn’t work at all. A shiny “UEFI/iwlwifi/broadcom” and “secret microcode updates” should work.
It’s not just “powered by Linux” but powered by “
linux-firmware
/Linux”Did I do the funny yet?
This runs arch btw
deleted by creator
#I don’t have #any #distro pride. They’re #just computers man.
deleted by creator
Crystal Linux please !
Done! Welcome, distro #71.
Thank you!
Now updated to 75 distros.
Is it really a reason for pride to run a certain kernel?
If you are managing to successfully use TempleOS as a daily driver, I think you can be allowed to be proud of that.
I run the mainline kernel. The pride part is my system is built in a reproducible way, with all of the packages versioned and having versioned dependencies.
For example, my wine is from the stable channel, but the rest are from the unstable channel, but there are no conflicts because the dependencies are not installed globally
Maybe if you backport hardware support (including x86_64) and bug fixes manually from mainline to 2.4 and compile it as a 64-bit kernel with GCC-2.95.3 for a Ryzen. That’d pretty much get you whatever stickers you wanted. 🤣
HotDog Linux
Find me a logo big enough to print! 🌭
distro pride
no thanks. penguin is best.
Tux is included
Nice +1