I was told those double-hammocks were installed on a GPN, but I haven't seen them irl. I want to also upload them, but somebody else drew the sketch, my version is based on. And I have trouble to reach him right now.
So far I abstained from littering the place with crates and stuff, partly because I didn't know how many visitors the room had to handle. You also start videotelephony if you get too close to another visitor. I had your crates open, I think I also had to adjust their color a bit to match that green-blue metal, I use.
Yes, more run down would probably look better and closer to what we have in our hackerspace. I just chose the least pompous-looking couch I found in your upholstery set. Some defect overlays might be nice, like the broken tiles in lpc goes to space.
Our map is still available on the test intance(no idea how long that instance will stay online)
I guess it depends a lot on where the company is from, which created those fonts. And whether it's also covered design patents, I don't think they get awarded automatically in the US.
If they are from a country where typefaces are protected by copyright law, it could be possible that could be done within the US, but I'm not sure. But some people from other countries couldn't use it, I don't think it would be legit to put it under an international open license.
> Similarly, there are no copyright laws protecting the design of any given letter, style, shape, or brushstroke.
... that article just tries to makes it sound criminal to copy a typeface in the US.
There are reasons why typefaces are not covered by copyright laws here in Germany. Every print would effectively become a derivative work of the typefaces.
As far as I read, it's not generally true that typefaces are not protected.
That appears to be only the situation of the US and Japan.
In Germany they are (automatically) protected as a registered design for 10 or when extended for 25 years. (which appears to be similar to a design patent)
Irish copyright law covers typefaces for 15 years.
Russia has them fully copyrighted.
In UK it is copyrighted for 25 years.
The general rule for the EU appears to be automatic registered design for 3 years and can be extended for up to 25 years.
Oh, I missed this challenge.
So I'm adding https://opengameart.org/content/lpc-portraits-remix retroactively.
I did not create it for this challenge, but I think it fits it well. I moved it to one of my favorite palettes, the hair and skin tone palettes of LPC.
I was told those double-hammocks were installed on a GPN, but I haven't seen them irl. I want to also upload them, but somebody else drew the sketch, my version is based on. And I have trouble to reach him right now.
So far I abstained from littering the place with crates and stuff, partly because I didn't know how many visitors the room had to handle. You also start videotelephony if you get too close to another visitor. I had your crates open, I think I also had to adjust their color a bit to match that green-blue metal, I use.
Yes, more run down would probably look better and closer to what we have in our hackerspace. I just chose the least pompous-looking couch I found in your upholstery set. Some defect overlays might be nice, like the broken tiles in lpc goes to space.
Our map is still available on the test intance(no idea how long that instance will stay online)
And there is lots of stuff still missing.
There are still a lot of WorkAdventure tiles, I'd like to replace with LPC stuff:
https://workadventu.re/choose-map.html
https://github.com/npeguin/office-map
I found a toilet in LPC Tile Atlas2, but I have no idea where it's originally from.
Where is the toilet from?
A new extension is available: [LPC] FraMa sci-fi extensions
This adds more floor tile variations and animations
I guess it depends a lot on where the company is from, which created those fonts. And whether it's also covered design patents, I don't think they get awarded automatically in the US.
If they are from a country where typefaces are protected by copyright law, it could be possible that could be done within the US, but I'm not sure. But some people from other countries couldn't use it, I don't think it would be legit to put it under an international open license.
> Similarly, there are no copyright laws protecting the design of any given letter, style, shape, or brushstroke.
... that article just tries to makes it sound criminal to copy a typeface in the US.
There are reasons why typefaces are not covered by copyright laws here in Germany. Every print would effectively become a derivative work of the typefaces.
As far as I read, it's not generally true that typefaces are not protected.
That appears to be only the situation of the US and Japan.
In Germany they are (automatically) protected as a registered design for 10 or when extended for 25 years. (which appears to be similar to a design patent)
Irish copyright law covers typefaces for 15 years.
Russia has them fully copyrighted.
In UK it is copyrighted for 25 years.
The general rule for the EU appears to be automatic registered design for 3 years and can be extended for up to 25 years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intellectual_property_protection_of_typefa...
There are https://opengameart.org/content/tiny-16-expanded-character-sprites and https://opengameart.org/content/tiny-16-more-character-animations
Your tag is wrong, the other spelling variant of favorite is used for the tag.
Another quick and dirty one: https://opengameart.org/content/tinygb-portraits-remix
Zoria palette with Game Boy Color restrictions (4 colors per 8x8)
Oh, I missed this challenge.
So I'm adding https://opengameart.org/content/lpc-portraits-remix retroactively.
I did not create it for this challenge, but I think it fits it well. I moved it to one of my favorite palettes, the hair and skin tone palettes of LPC.
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