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<sect1 id="dirs-trunk-identity" xreflabel="trunk/Identity">
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<title>The <filename class="directory">trunk/Identity</filename> directory</title>
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<para>The <filename class="directory">trunk/Identity</filename>
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directory implements The CentOS Project <emphasis>corporate
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identity</emphasis> based on the The CentOS Project
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<emphasis>mission</emphasis> and <emphasis>release
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schema</emphasis>.</para>
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<para id="corporate-mission" xreflabel="Corporate mission">The CentOS Project exists to provide The CentOS
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Distribution. Additionally, The CentOS Project provides The
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CentOS Web and The CentOS Showroom to support and promote the
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existence of The CentOS Distribution, respectively.</para>
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<para id="corporate-identity" xreflabel="Corporate identity"> The
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CentOS Project corporate identity is the ``persona'' of the
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organization known as The CentOS Project. The CentOS Project
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corporate identity plays a significant role in the way The CentOS
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Project, as organization, presents itself to both internal and
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external stakeholders. In general terms, The CentOS Project
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corporate identity expresses the values and ambitions of The
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CentOS Project organization, its business, and its
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characteristics. The CentOS Project corporate identity provides
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visibility, recognizability, reputation, structure and
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identification to The CentOS Project organization by means of
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<emphasis>corporate design</emphasis>, <emphasis>corporate
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communication</emphasis>, and <emphasis>corporate
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behaviour</emphasis>.</para>
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<para id="corporate-design" xreflabel="The corporate design"> The
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corporate design is focused on the effective communication of
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corporate messages. Corporate messages are all the information
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emitted from the corporation to a target audience. In order for
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such communication to happen, it is required to put the messages
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on a medium available for the target audience to react upon.
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These media are know as <emphasis>corporate
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manifestations</emphasis>, because the corporation manifests its
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existence through them. The specific way used by the corporation
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to set their messages on different media is what the corporate
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design is about.</para>
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<para>The amount of manifestations a corporation uses to
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communicate its existence may very from one corporation to
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another. In the very specific case of The CentOS Project, the
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following corporate manifestations come to mind:</para>
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<orderedlist>
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<listitem>
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<para>The CentOS Distribution — This corporate
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manifestaion is built from SRPM packages. There are SRPM
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packages that make a remarkable use of images (e.g., Anaconda,
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Grub, Syslinux, Gdm, Kdm, Gsplash, Ksplash, Rhgb, Firstboot,
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etc.), packages that make a moderate use of images and
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packages that don't use images at all. Also, there are some
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packages that make use of text-based information that need to
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be changed, too (e.g., release notes, eula, the welcome page
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of the web browser, etc.), in order for The CentOS Project to
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comply the redistribution guidelines of its upstream provider.
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The CentOS Distribution corporate manifestation focuses its
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attention on SRPM packages that use images in a remarkable
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way, specifically those packages that contain branding
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information, in both image and textual format, from the
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upstream provider. This way, replacing image and text-based
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files, we implement the corporate design of The CentOS
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Distribution corporate manifestations.</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>The CentOS Web — This corporate manifestation
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exists to support The CentOS Distribution corporate
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manifestation. The CentOS Web corporate manifestation covers
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web applications used by The CentOS Project to manifest its
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existence on the Internet. These web applications are free
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software and come from different providers which distribute
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their work with predefined visual styles. Frequently, these
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predefined visual styles have no visual relation among
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themselves and introduce some visual contraditions when they
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all are put together. These visual contraditions need to be
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removed in order to comply with The CentOS Project corporate
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structure guidelines.</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>The CentOS Showroom — This corporate manifestation
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exists to promote The CentOS Distribution. The CentOS
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Showroom corporate manifestation covers industrial production
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of objects branded by The CentOS Project (e.g., clothes,
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stationery and installation media). These branded objects are
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for distribution on social events and/or shops. They provide
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a way of promotion and a route for commercialization that may
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help to aliviate The CentOS Project expenses (e.g., hosting,
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servers, full-time-developers, etc.), in a similar way as
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donations may do.</para>
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</listitem>
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</orderedlist>
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<para>The corporate manifestations above seem to cover all the
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media required by The CentOS Project, as organization, to show its
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existence. However, other corporate manifestations could be added
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in the future, if needed, to cover different areas like building,
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offices, transportation and whaterver medium The CentOS Project
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thouches to show its existence.</para>
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communication"> The CentOS Project corporate communication is
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based on <emphasis>community communication</emphasis> and takes
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place through the following avenues:
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<itemizedlist>
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<listitem><para>The CentOS Chat (#centos, #centos-social},
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#centos-devel on irc.freenode.net)</para></listitem>
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<listitem><para>The CentOS Mailing Lists (<ulink url="http://lists.centos.org/" />).</para></listitem>
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<listitem><para>The CentOS Forums (<ulink url="http://forums.centos.org/" />).</para></listitem>
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<listitem><para>The CentOS Wiki (<ulink url="http://wiki.centos.org/" />).</para></listitem>
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<listitem><para>Social events, interviews, conferences, etc.</para></listitem>
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</itemizedlist>
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</para>
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behaviour">The CentOS Project corporate behaviour is based on
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<emphasis>community behaviour</emphasis> which take place in
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linkend="corporate-communication" />.</para>
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structure"> The CentOS Project corporate structure is based on a
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<emphasis>monolithic corporate visual identity
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structure</emphasis>. In this configuration, one unique name and
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one unique visual style is used in all corporate manifestations of
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The CentOS Project.</para>
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<para>In a monolithic corporate visual identity structure,
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internal and external stakeholders feel a strong sensation of
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uniformity, orientation, and identification with the organization.
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No matter if you are visiting web sites, using the distribution,
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or acting on social events, the one unique name and one unique
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visual style connects them all to say: <emphasis>Hey! we are all
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part of The CentOS Project</emphasis>.</para>
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<para>Other corporate structures for The CentOS Project have been
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considered as well. Such is the case of producing one different
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visual style for each major release of The CentOS Distribution.
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This structure isn't inconvenient at all, but some visual
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contradictions could be introduced if it isn't applied correctly
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and we need to be aware of it. To apply it correctly, we need to
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know what The CentOS Project is made of.</para>
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<para>The CentOS Project, as organization, is mainly made of (but
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not limited to) three corporate manifestions: The CentOS
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Distribution, The CentOS Web and The CentOS Showroom. Inside The
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CentOS Distribution corporate manifestations, The CentOS Project
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maintains near to four different major releases of The CentOS
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Distribution (e.g., the operating system), parallely in time.
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However, inside The CentOS Web visual manifestations, the content
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is produced for no specific release information (e.g., there is no
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a complete web site for each major release of The CentOS
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Distribution individually, but one web site to cover them all).
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Likewise, the content produced in The CentOS Showroom is created
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for no release-specific at all, but for The CentOS Project in
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general.</para>
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<para>In order to produce the correct corporate structure for The
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CentOS Project, we need to concider all the corporate
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manifestations The CentOS Project is made of, not just one of
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them. If one different visual style is used for each major
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release of The CentOS Distribution, which one of those different
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visual styles would be used to cover the remaining visual
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manifestations The CentOS Project is made of (e.g., The CentOS Web
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and The CentOS Showroom)?</para>
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<para>Probably you are thinking, that's right, but The CentOS
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Brand connects them all already, why would we need to join them up
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into the same visual style too, isn't it more work to do, and
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harder to maintain?</para>
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<para>Harder to maintain, more work to do, probably. Specially
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when you consider that The CentOS Project has proven stability and
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consistency through time and, that, certainly, didn't come through
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swinging magical wands or something but hardly working out to
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automate tasks and providing maintainance through time. Said that,
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we consider that The CentOS Project corporate structure must be
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consequent with such stability and consistency tradition, beyond
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the work it might require initially. It is true that The CentOS
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Brand does connect all the visual manifestations it is present on,
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but that connection would be stronger if one unique visual style
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backups it, too. In fact, whatever thing you do to strength the
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visual connection among The CentOS Project corporate
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manifestations would be very good in favor of The CentOS Project
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recognition.</para>
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<para>Obviously, having just one visual style in all corporate
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manifestations for eternity would be a very boring thing and would
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give the impression of a visually dead project. So, there is no
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problem on creating a brand new visual style for each new major
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release of The CentOS Distribution, in order to refresh The CentOS
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Distribution visual style; the problem itself is in not
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propagating the brand new visual style created for the new release
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of The CentOS Distribution to all other visual manifestations The
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CentOS Project is made of, in a way The CentOS Project could be
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recognized no matter what corporate manifestation be in front of
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us. Such lack of uniformity is what introduces the visual
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contradition we are precisely trying to solve by mean of themes
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production in the CentOS Artwork Repository.</para>
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</sect1>
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