Actually it just went from xcf > ppm > lss. But I generated a png in gimp: http://www.mitosys.com/images/centos-boot-clean.png Here are the other two: http://www.mitosys.com/images/centos-boot-clean.ppm http://www.mitosys.com/images/centos-boot-clean.xcf -- Best regards, Sherman Boyd On 12/9/05, Karanbir Singh <mail-lists at karan.org> wrote: > Sherman Boyd wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I'm working on cleaning up the bootlogo for CentOS. I just finished > > and I'm dead tired, but since I didn't find very good documentation on > > some of this stuff with a google search I wanted to document what I > > did: > > > > First I took some of the standard artwork and cleaned it up in gimp. > > I saved the image to a 640x300 14 color ppm. > > > > Looking at the .msg files under the /isolinux directory I was able to > > figure out that redhat actually uses 7 different text colors in it's > > menu. Each color has a corresponding hex code that specifies which of > > the sixteen colors in splash.lss to use. I matched them up as close > > as possible, and converted the ppm to an lss: > > > > ppmtolss16 "#000100=0" "#7b5b89=9" "#e5dde8=7" "#ffffff=15" > > "#ff020a=2" "#f1aa23=12" "#9ad02d=10" <centos-boot-clean.ppm > > > >>splash.lss > > > > > > Here is the end result: > > > > http://www.mitosys.com/images/splash.lss > > Can we also get the .png file ? the png2lss converstion gets run as a > part of the build process. > > > > > Hope you like it. The f7 anaconda looks good eh! > > > > Snakes! > > - K > _______________________________________________ > CentOS-devel mailing list > CentOS-devel at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-devel >