[UIFe][FFe] Change application Name etc to Ubuntu Software
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gnome-software (Ubuntu) |
Fix Released
|
Critical
|
Unassigned | ||
ubuntu-docs (Ubuntu) |
Fix Released
|
Medium
|
Gunnar Hjalmarsson |
Bug Description
We would like to change some strings in GNOME's Software application to "Ubuntu Software".
The main reason is that our users are used to the old Ubuntu Software Center and many docs talk about it. By changing the name to Ubuntu Software we can offer some assurances that it's the right tool for the job. Our patches also make Software on Ubuntu very Ubuntu centric.
It is not the intention to claim Software as our own work.
.desktop "Name=" changes to "Ubuntu Software"
Window title changes to "Ubuntu Software"
Icon changes to the u-s-c icon
having a binary named "ubuntu-software" for naming consistancy
I have reached out to the upstream project and we've agreed that these changes can go ahead.
summary: |
- [UIfe][FFe] Change application Name etc to Ubuntu Software + [UIFe][FFe] Change application Name etc to Ubuntu Software |
description: | updated |
Changed in ubuntu-docs (Ubuntu): | |
assignee: | nobody → Gunnar Hjalmarsson (gunnarhj) |
status: | New → Fix Committed |
Have discussed this with Will and Seb on IRC. The plan for avoiding disruption of the GNOME experience (since the GNOME desktop depends on the same package) is to use OnlyShowIn=Unity for the different name, which sounds like a reasonable plan.
The biggest problem is that we are past translation freeze for the release, which means that making this change now will regress the name for all non-English users at release time - instead of 'Software' localized in their language, they will see 'Ubuntu Software' in English.
It's my recommendation to make this change via SRU, to give translators time to catch up - given that the argument for changing this is to make users more comfortable with the nomenclature, I think having the string appear in a foreign language (and even a foreign script) for the majority of users is more awkward than having the word 'Ubuntu' missing in the near term.