Just almost a week to go before 2017 Koha International Conference and our banner for this Conference is now up at http://kohacon2017philippines.com/about-us/. A simple narrative on the banner you can see in the link and below: The KohaCon2017 banner depicts Bayanihan, a common tradition in Philippine towns where community members volunteer to help a family move to a new place by volunteering to transport the house (bahay-kubo) to a specific location. The process involves literally carrying the house to its new location. This is done by putting bamboo poles forming a strong frame to lift the stilts from the ground and carrying the whole house with the men positioned at the ends of each pole. Bayanihan spirit is also best embodied in Free and Open Software more specifically Koha ILS. Within the Koha ILS community, every individual (either as developer, documentation manager or just plain user that reports bug) works toward a goal of making Koha ILS the best library automation package. The zeroes and ones (binary) that can be send in the foreground is a repetition of the word “Koha” represented in binary digits, which is the smallest unit of data on a computer. The binary digits are in colors blue and red, which represent the blue and red horizontal stripes in the Philippine flag. The Koha ILS logo and below it, Koha written in ancient Filipino script baybayin, has a motif of yellow which depicts the third color in the Philippine flag. We hope you liked the banner as well as the narrative behind it. We hope to see you in Makati City, Philippines during KohaCon2017. Mabuhay Koha! -- View this message in context: http://koha.1045719.n5.nabble.com/KohaCon2017-banner-tp5936695.html Sent from the Koha-general mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
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