Of course, they can have a different name and in the case of the 'old'
Wiktionary logo, also different text. But the general style of the
logo should be the same for all language versions. This is not the
case with the two Wiktionary logos, they are distinctively different.
If you have a project that should be recognized all over the world, by
anyone, without any confusion you shouldn't use two logos.
Let's assume for example that the German Wikipedia would use a
different logo than the English Wikipedia. That would be very
confusing for everyone. A logo is the first thing people remember and
notice about a website, and they use it to recognize it from other
websites.
-- Hay / Husky
On Nov 14, 2007 1:53 PM, Thomas Goldammer <thogol(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
Ahoi.
2007/11/14, Husky <huskyr(a)gmail.com>om>:
I think this should be an important issue. It can
be confusing for
people visiting the website in multiple languages. All projects should
have an uniform logo.
Why? They have different layouts of the entries, different
conventions, and of course they are in different languages. So why
shouldn't they have different logos? :o)
Thogo. (de.wiktionary)
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