As the title states… and 6 days early, none the less!
(hope that makes up for them being late last time!)
Usual place… Vintage PCs and more
Enjoy, feel free to leave feedback/comments/questions below!
As the title states… and 6 days early, none the less!
(hope that makes up for them being late last time!)
Usual place… Vintage PCs and more
Enjoy, feel free to leave feedback/comments/questions below!
Thank You Vintage! I love your work!
D"ding now.
You’re very welcome!
I downloaded 12.1(the final version that got released today) and I couldn’t find any cd/dvd labels, but then I found yours and they were great.
Thank you for making them.
Also I am a new OpenSuse user and I created an account just so I could say thanks:)
Glad you like them!
The reason I started making these is I was in the exact same boat - a few releases back, I was disappointed in the lack of nice clean CD labels, so I whipped up a batch. Reception was incredibly positive, so I’ve kept it up as my way of saying “thanks” to the community for a great distro.
(I also suspect that’s the reason my forum rep is increasing… hehe, didn’t even realize that’s what the green bar was until I moused over it by accident one day.)
These are still the best openSUSE CD and DVD labels available anywhere and so promptly after release. Many thanks once again. I have now used these labels for the last four releases, including 12.1.
I did, however, need to convert them to JPEG format using ImageMagick. ImageMagick is part of the standard openSUSE distro and is on the DVD. If you also need labels in JPEG format, use the following ImageMagick convert script:
#!/bin/bash
for file in x64_DVD x64_GNO x64_KDE x64_NET x86_DVD x86_GNO x86_KDE x86_NET
do
convert $file.png $file.jpg
done
Don’t forget to click the star icon in this forum to add to VintagePC’s reputation score, if you haven’t already done so.
Glad you like them too! I’ll be making these as long as I’m using openSuSE.
The main reason I use PNG is for the very high lossless compression. You can convert to just about any file type using the above-mentioned convert command. It is context-aware, based on the extension you give the output file, so “convert a.png b.gif” creates b.gif.
I do have the original source SVG available, if someone requests.
I|-- (This is the rep star he’s talking about, for those of you wondering. It’s well hidden on this forum!)
\I/
IV