Difference between revisions of "Getting Started"

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* [http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8zwgr_sugar-084-using-journal_tech Using the Journal]  
 
* [http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8zwgr_sugar-084-using-journal_tech Using the Journal]  
 
* [http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8zwl4_sugar-084-using-source-view_tech Using View Source]
 
* [http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8zwl4_sugar-084-using-source-view_tech Using View Source]
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====Developer mini tutorials====
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* See [[Development Team/Mini tutorials]].
  
 
===Connecting to the Internet===
 
===Connecting to the Internet===

Revision as of 09:26, 28 April 2009

english | español | português | français HowTo [ID# 28160] 

About Sugar

Sugar is a different desktop environment to what is normally used in Microsoft Windows, Apple's OS X or other Linux operating systems. It is conceived as a tool to allow kids to learn interactively. One of the first things that a child sees, therefore, is not a hard disk or a trash can—it’s the other kids in the “neighborhood.” Programs and applications are called Activities, many of which allow for collaboration between users who are connected to each other by Wi-Fi or through a Jabber network. Sugar developers are encouraged to write activities with collaborative elements that are automatically enabled.

Sugar is developed in Python and runs on Linux Kernel 2.6.22 and the Fedora 9 base environment.

For an overview of the components composing a Sugar system see the Sugar Application Stack.

Getting Sugar

See Downloads.

For more technical information, please see the Supported systems page for a list of the different ways that Sugar may be run on a computer.

Getting started

The Sugar user manual

Sugarlabs_mainpage_07.png available as: HTML or .pdf 128 pages, 8.3 MBytes (for saving or printing).

Tutorials

Videos

Developer mini tutorials

Connecting to the Internet

Connecting to the Internet is something that somewhat falls between the cracks of Sugar and the computer it's running on.

On the XO laptop, there are three ways to connect to the Internet:

  • Wireless access point (Wi-Fi hotspot);
  • “School Server” mesh network; or
  • “simple” mesh network, which lets you collaborate directly with other XOs running Sugar.

From a conventional laptop running Sugar, connecting through an access point works. (Mesh support is becoming available on more machines.) Depending upon which Jabber server you are connected to, you'll see different collections of "neighbors" in the Neighborhood View.

Read the Connecting to the Internet page for detailed instructions.

Release notes

  • Release notes for Sugar 0.84 are available here.

See Development Team Release Notes for other releases.

Other resources

Other resources are listed on the Deployment Team/Resources page.