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Re: A few questions: Libre SoC, website, Rust


From: Almudena Garcia
Subject: Re: A few questions: Libre SoC, website, Rust
Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2020 02:32:03 +0200

> Every year or couple of year has its own marketting trend, and if you
> don't follow it each time (thus consuming your time just for that),
In fact, It's not necessary to follow the hype about a technology or a trend.
But It's not necessary to follow the hype to create a beautiful webpage. The current page is many 90s style.
The FSF webpage (https://www.fsf.org/) is more beautiful than the current Hurd webpage, for example. The GNU project's main website (https://www.gnu.org/) is a good example too.

So, It's possible to make a beautiful and useful webpage, without following the latest trends and hype.


El jue., 20 ago. 2020 a las 0:20, Samuel Thibault (<samuel.thibault@gnu.org>) escribió:
Almudena Garcia, le jeu. 20 août 2020 00:03:08 +0200, a ecrit:
> > But deciding to have a look at some project only because the website is all
> > shiny, no.
> It is more important than you're thinking now.

AGAIN I'm saying it's not "important". What I'm saying is that I don't
understand the *reasoning* behind people actually thinking that an
all-shiny website truly means a technically sound project.

Yes, the website probably needs some reorganization so that newcomers
find the information they need more easily etc. I'm not talking about
this.

I'm talking about the flurry of cosmetic *trends* I see on all websites.
Every year or couple of year has its own marketting trend, and if you
don't follow it each time (thus consuming your time just for that),
you'd be considered "old" and "ugly". It's that haste, completely
unrelated to the actual content of the website that I just don't
understand from people with a more evolved brain than monkeys have.

Samuel

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