Macintosh

From Sugar Labs
Revision as of 19:21, 30 June 2012 by FGrose (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


There are many options for using Sugar on an Apple Macintosh Computer.

Taste of Sugar provides a safe read-only experience that does not alter your Mac. Get to know the Sugar Learning Platform by using it first hand. The quickest way to experience Sugar is to go here...
Sugar in a Window installs to a directory on your Hard Disk. In a Window or Full Screen you can switch between Mac and Sugar instantly. Your journal is safe and remembered between restarts. Read more...
Sugar on Linux Linux runs on Apple computers long after Apple discontinues support. There are many choices available for easy installation; but after first boot, their support for Sugar varies. Read more...


Question.png
Please help:
Assistance is needed from Macintosh system experts to document installing or running a Fedora LiveOS image on a Mac.
35px-Activity-write.png
Note:
See this Fedora bug. Apparently, Fedora 16 (Fall 2011) will have kernel support for EFI booting.


Other ways to get Sugar on your Mac
Sugar on a Stick loaded USB devices should run on Intel Macs.

Follow these instructions every time you wish to use your Sugar on a Stick device on an Intel Mac:

  • Boot the Mac with the boot-helper CD
  • interrupt the boot sequence
  • edit the kernel parameters
vmlinuz0 initrd=initrd0.img root=LABEL=FEDORA rootfstype=iso9660 rw liveimg overlay=LABEL=soas-2-blueberry quiet rhgb selinux=0
  • continue the boot.

You can create a Sugar on a Stick device with a Mac. However, to save the Journal you must create your stick on a PC or Linux machine: Instructions for Windows and Linux

  1. Download the boot helper from: http://www.wronkiewicz.net/soas-4-boot-test.iso for Mango Lassi
    http://www.wronkiewicz.net/soas-3-boot-test.iso for Mirabelle
    http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/releases/soas-2-boot.iso for Blueberry
  2. Put in the boot-helper CD
  3. Plug in the USB
  4. Turn on the Mac
  5. At the chime press the "C" key

The Mac should boot first from the CD then from the USB device. As of 12 April 2009, this is experimental. Let us know what results you get.