Rebrand the project to Cider
Closed this issue · 10 comments
This issue has two distinct elements: a new name, and a logo.
Name
I've decided that I don't love applereleaser as a name long-term. It's bland, it's too many syllables, and I don't want to give folks the impression this is affiliated with Apple. Here are the criteria I'm laying out for a new name:
- It should stay away from the release, ship, or submission motifs (too similar to goreleaser, spaceship, etc) unless it's a really good pitch.
- It must be three or less (ideally two) syllables, so it's easier for folks to remember it.
- Stay away from initialisms, acronyms, or abbreviations unless it's a really good pitch.
- It shouldn't give off an impression that this is endorsed by Apple.
Some examples of other good tool names in the Apple dev OSS ecosystem:
- Spaceship
- Fastlane
- SwiftGen
- Swiftlint
- Mint
- SourceKit
Logo
- The logo should compliment the name and the app, by being simple and flexible.
- It should scale well to different sizes
- The logo should avoid Apple, Go "gopher", iPhone, or App Store motifs unless they can be integrated subtly and remixed in compliance with Apple's brand guidelines and fair use.
Requested assets:
- Navigation header for docs site
- favicon.ico for docs site
- square image ~150px high version for README.md
Kraken – as in "Release the Kraken"
Snapple – "Makes releasing Apple apps a snap!"
Dunk – I just think it's a nice image. Like, as the final stage of your application, you're doing a slam-dunk
Nimbus – Has a "sky" theme
Pelican – Also "sky" themed. Named after the Pelican mailman from Animal Crossing
Norman/Porter – "delivery" themed. Reference to Norman Reedus's character in Death Stranding
Livia – Named after part of the scientific name for Carrier Pigeons
Cider
Explanation
- Kids giving their teachers apples or potatoes as a token in exchange for their education is a decent analogy for devs being required to pay tribute in order to be listed on the App Store
- Those apples were commonly used for cider back in those days because it was cleaner than water
Cons
- https://github.com/cider is taken, but it hasn't been updated since 2014
- There are other projects in ObjC/Swift named Cider, with varying degrees of activity