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The Fedora Project has high standards, and our users | The Fedora Project has high standards, and our users expect that when something carries our name, it meets a certain level of reliability, reproducibility, sanity, and elegance. At the same time, two of our [[Foundations|basic values]] are "Features" and "First". Often, emerging features ''aren't'' yet reliable. Experimental designs might not be pretty. A little bit of messiness is particularly likely when we aim to integrate these new ideas ''first''. | ||
'''Fedora Playground''' is a label for services, offerings, and | '''Fedora Playground''' is a label for services, offerings, and subprojects which are officially part of the Fedora Project as a whole, but which we know are a rough around the edges. Unlike a [[Remix|Fedora Remix]], something with the Fedora Playground label can use [[Request_For_Resources|Fedora Project resources]] and - within the general [[Legal:Trademark_guidelines|trademark guidelines]] - the Fedora name. | ||
All software include in a Fedora Playground subproject must be free and open source software, and must meet the same legal rules that apply to inclusion in the Fedora distribution. |
Revision as of 19:33, 28 September 2016
The Fedora Project has high standards, and our users expect that when something carries our name, it meets a certain level of reliability, reproducibility, sanity, and elegance. At the same time, two of our basic values are "Features" and "First". Often, emerging features aren't yet reliable. Experimental designs might not be pretty. A little bit of messiness is particularly likely when we aim to integrate these new ideas first.
Fedora Playground is a label for services, offerings, and subprojects which are officially part of the Fedora Project as a whole, but which we know are a rough around the edges. Unlike a Fedora Remix, something with the Fedora Playground label can use Fedora Project resources and - within the general trademark guidelines - the Fedora name.
All software include in a Fedora Playground subproject must be free and open source software, and must meet the same legal rules that apply to inclusion in the Fedora distribution.