New special effects library
Kurt Pfeifle
k1pfeifle at gmx.net
Tue Dec 19 17:56:06 GMT 2006
On Tuesday 19 December 2006 15:08, Aaron J. Seigo wrote:
> names need to be pretty obvious for users, with
> large brands being an exception.
Agreed.... but: "large brands" are not large from the first day they
use their brand name. They grow large over time (or not).
Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook, Firefox, Mozilla, Acrobat, Skype, Google,
QuickTime, iPod, QuarkExpress... I think we can agree that all these
are somewhat "large" brand names (some nearly as old as personal com-
puting for the masses, some rather recent); however, neither of them
is suggestive of the purpose the software is made for.
Photoshop, CorelDraw, WinWord, Exchange, Netscape Navigator, Internet
Explorer, iTunes, Illustrator, PageMaker,... these do somehow suggest
what the software is for.
It is just not a clear-cut thing which amount of "obviousness" brands
need to have for users from their outset, and you cannot foretell the
success of a branding effort in advance. Of course, if the product is
uncool + sux, its chances for becoming a household word are miniscule.
Which leaves us not much choice for "rules" or "policies" (other than
this: developers themselves decide after hearing some comments, pro +
con, about their initial naming or alternative proposals).
P.S.:I think the naming decisions for KDE4 with Solid, Phonon, Plasma
and Decibel will tend to turn out very nicely, and they have all
chances to succeed in gaining a good branding recognition.
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