On Fri, 2004-12-31 at 15:18 +0100, Hanspeter Kunz wrote: > On Thu, 2004-12-30 at 18:01 +0100, martin f krafft wrote: > > Hi all! > > > > In the process of completion of my book (http://debianbook.info), > > I have one more question. Unfortunately, I am on a shitty GSM link > > right now and the available (crippled) means of research have not > > been able to produce an answer to the following: > > > > Where does the Debian Swirl come from? > > What does it try to symbolise? > > Was (partly) answered on debian-user some days ago: > > http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2004/12/msg03402.html >
After digging a bit more, I found the following post: http://lists.userlinux.com/pipermail/discuss/2004-March/004625.html --- I quote: --------------------------------------------------------- It's "magic smoke". Electrical engineer lore is that when you burn out an electronic component, you cause the "magic smoke" that makes it work to be released. Once the magic smoke is gone, the component doesn't work any longer. Debian is supposed to be the magic smoke that makes your computer work. Thanks Bruce [Perens] --- end of quote ----------------------------------------------------- Shouldn't this explanation go to www.debian.org/logos/ ? cheers, Hp. -- Hanspeter Kunz Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Ph.D. Student Department of Information Technology Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of Zurich Tel: +41.(0)44.63-54306 Andreasstrasse 15, Office 2.12 http://ailab.ch/people/hkunz CH-8050 Zurich, Switzerland Spamtraps: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] --- You can go anywhere you want if you look serious and carry a clipboard.
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part