Hello Design Team,
Ankur Sinha (fas username ankursinha, cc'd) and I have recently embarked on a new project that is set, at the moment, to be included as a Fedora 14, or possibly Fedora 13 feature, designed to give new and old users a tour of the Fedora Project, Fedora Linux and their recently installed software. It would add an option to the last form of Firstboot with the option to start this at first login, serving as an equivalent to Windows' "Welcome Center" (I don't have any pictures of this, unfortunately, for reference) and basically just introduce Fedora users to their new desktop, and the project as a whole, including ways to contribute, if they are interested. Naturally, such a project will take the involvement of many teams, including the Design team.
What Ankur and I were considering was to implement a visual introduction to the application, with a tree (like, an actual tree with branches, etc) where each leaf is a separate "part" of Fedora (General Overview, FAQ, Getting Help, GNOME overview, KDE overview, LXDE overview, Development Tools, Joining Fedora etc) all installable as separate packages, pulled in, most likely, by installing packages from that Group in anaconda.
Such a project, of course, treads a fine line between the application programming and designing, and having such an application, which could possibly be presented as the first thing new Fedora users see, look and fit with Fedora is very important. Ankur's (imo) awesome idea for the interactive tree, where each leaf is an icon for that SIG/Piece of Fedora leading introduces a few design questions which must be addressed.
How does the Design team feel about such a User interface? Does it fit with the feel of Fedora/ We will probably have UI mockups by the end up this week. How well would such an application work from an accessibility point of view
Thanks for your time, Ryan Rix (fas username rrix)
design-team@lists.fedoraproject.org