Summer of Code/2013

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A draft copy of our application

Project candidates

A list of projects potential participants might contribute within GSoC program. Every project is shortly described with mentioning secondary skills for possible participants (the primal skill is desire to do something useful).

Note
Potential mentors, please feel free to add ideas to this list. Also, feel free to add your name to a project you'd be willing to co-mentor.
Note
Potential students, more project ideas can be found on our Features page.

Sugar Core

Sugar Framework for writing activity in full HTML5

Sugarhtml5.png

The objective is to develop a JavaScript framework allowing to write Sugar activities in full HTML5/JavaScript. The framework will expose to JavaScript an API to call Sugar features:

  • Journal/Datastore,
  • Collaboration/Telepathy,
  • Toolbar handling,
  • Sugar look&feel - for example via a CSS style sheet usable on HTML controls
  • Access to Sugar settings (buddy name, colors, current language, ...),
  • View source.

Like PhoneGap/Cordova, the framework will come with a template to develop and package easily a new HTML5 activity. A basic tutorial will be include too. The work could be inspired by the work done with Enyo Framework in 1. By the way, the resulting framework should be JavaScript framework agnostic (no need for jQuery, Enyo, ...).

Mentor: Lionel Laské

Co-Mentor: Daniel Narvaez

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: A chance to learn from touching almost every corner of an advanced system.

Benefits to the Community: We'll greatly expand the reach of the project by opening the door to JavaScript programmers. Plus it will force us to clean up our APIs.

Unified journal view

Rather than viewing the details of a Journal entry on a separate page, the idea is to make the details appear in an expandable in-line format on the main Journal view. The look and feel would be more like Google+ or Facebook. Performance will be a major challenge.

Journal-02.jpeg

This project requires some working knowledge of the low-level Sugar Journal and datastore code.

Contact: User:Walter

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: A chance to exercise both design/UI and programming skills

Benefits to the Community: Long-overdue feature that will make this core Sugar feature more visible and appealing to our users

Plugin support

A number of activities, notably Turtle Art, are supporting plugins -- the ability to extend features by downloading additional modules. However, the mechanism for installing plugins is anything but friendly. It would be nice to design a uniform plugin bundle type and modify the activity installer to recognize this new type. Caveats include dependencies -- presumably the plugin would take care of that -- and version control -- plugins are often incumbent upon a specific version of an activity. ASLO hosting] should also be considered.

Strong Python skills and experience with Sugar toolkit required.

Contact: User:Walter

Co-mentor: User:Aneesh Dogra

Co-mentor: User:Francis

Level: Intermediate

Benefits to the Student: A chance to touch lots of code

Benefits to the Community: A simple way to develop and deliver customizations to activities and Sugar itself. Sugar can remain simple and stable, while the extensions can be more of a play ground for new ideas

End-user modifications of Sugar source

We have an existing mechanism for duplicating and modifying Sugar activities: a copy of the bundle can be creaed in ~/Activities, where it can be modified by the end user. We also have a mechanism for viewing the Sugar toolkit source, but no such convenient way for making changes without risking messing up the system. While it should be easy enough to make a duplicate copy in the user's home directory, and to change the Python paths to use the modified code, we need some mechanism -- presumably at boot -- to choose which version to run: the installed version or the modified version.

Strong Python skills and experience with Sugar toolkit required.

Contact: User:Walter

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: A chance to touch lots of code

Benefits to the Community: We'll come further towards our goal of enabling and encouraging our users to "own" through modification all aspects of our code.

Project sharing website

Create a Project Hosting Site similar to the Scratch website where kids can share the projects they have created using various Sugar Activities. The site should foster collaboration and sharing of projects. The Web Site should be built using a free web framework so that it can be installed at deployment sites. Some features include:

  • Ability to engage and connect with friends and classmates using various Social Networking sites/techniques.
  • Ability to post projects from various Sugar Activities (ex: Turtle Blocks, Etoys, Memorize, Physics, etc.)
  • Separate landing pages for different audiences (kids, teachers, parents, etc)
  • Section to share kid created art from projects
  • Ability for users to create galleries (of their own projects, favorite projects, subject specific topics, etc).
  • Ability to have “private classroom spaces”
  • Tools to support community management of the site
  • Multi-language support

Contact: User:MrSteve

Co-mentor: User:dogi

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Learn more about web services

Benefits to the Community: We need more mechanisms for sharing ideas and work. This is low-hanging fruit.

Sugar as a Service website

Create a Site for managing multiple "Sugar in a Browser" sessions like treehouse or broadway gnome Some features include:

Contact: User:dogi

Co-mentor: User:Aneesh Dogra

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Learn more about web services

Benefits to the Community: We need to reach out to people who are not yet comfortable with virtual machines et al. by developing less invasive mechanisms for distributing Sugar.

Clean up Ubuntu Sugar packaging

Tuquito-6-jabber.png

We have a number of disjointed half-finished or out of date efforts to package Sugar for Ubuntu, including:

This task is to develop a work flow such that Ubuntu becomes part of the Sugar release process, ensuring that Sugar on Ubuntu is current.

Contact: User:Satellit

Contact: alsroot on #sugar

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Learn about packaging

Benefits to the Community: Ubuntu is widely used and we should have our best bits bundled with it in order to reach more potential users.

Implement help mechanism for activities using Mallard

Mallard is a mark-up language that makes it easy to provide user help. It would be a nice feature to add Mallard-like help to activities, accessed through a mechanism similar to the view source mechanism. We need to sort through two issues: integration into Sugar and integration into our i18n / L10n system.

Contact: User:Walter

Co-mentor: User:Aneesh Dogra

Co-mentor: User:Francis

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Learn about lots of cool tools.

Benefits to the Community: Most of our help is in the wiki and in English. This will enable us to reach our users more directly and in their first language.

Activity Development Framework

This framework should allow to:

  • Make toolbars from factories removing many lines of code.
  • Start a project through typing a command.
  • Doing collaboration easier to implement.
  • Any other work which makes the development process hard and can be framed.

Contact: User:Francis

Benefits to the Student: Learn to articulate to others how to do something useful.

Benefits to the Community: We don't provide enough support for our developers. Time to address that deficiency.

ASLO Enhancements

The current Activity Library is based in an old version of the Mozilla Add-ons Library.

This project is divided in three parts:

  • Update the old platform and have the corresponding modifications to distribute Sugar Activities instead of Mozilla Plugins.
  • Add an activity manager to the control panel. Allowing the installation/update of activities from ASLO.
  • Add to the Sugar Bundle Builder a way to auto-upload activities to ASLO.

Contact: User:Francis

Co-mentor: User:RafaelOrtiz

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Learn about web services

Benefits to the Community: Our "app store" is not as accessible as it needs to be.

Sugar Activities

Write Turtle Blocks in Turtle Blocks

In support of making Sugar as transparent and fungible as possible, we'd like to make it not just Free, but provide affordances for end-user modifications. Turtle Blocks is a possible stepping stone towards that end: a programming environment approachable by children as young as five-years old. So as a first step, let's write Turtle Blocks in Turtle Blocks. From that experience, we'll hopefully know how to approach the more general Sugar problem.

Contact: User:Walter

Co-mentor:Tony Forster

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Lots of good Python hacking involved

Benefits to the Community: We'll learn how far we can push on the idea that end users *can* modify code.

Python export functionality for Turtle Blocks

A goal of Turtle Blocks is not just to get children programming, but to launch them out of block world into text-based languages where they can develop more sophisticated programs. While Turtle Blocks is written in Python and can be extended by importing Python modules, it currently exports only in its native block language and in Logo. For this project, we'd want to enable a Python export option so that programmers can take their Turtle projects and extend them into full-fledged Python projects. The hypothesis is that this would lead more children to grow their programming skills beyond simple block programs.

Contact: User:Walter

Co-mentor: Tony Forster

Level: Advanced

Benefits to the Student: Lots of good Python hacking involved

Benefits to the Community: We'll have a vehicle for studying whether or not we can bring students of programming from block worlds to text-based programming and debugging.

Portfolio videos

Working with the maintainer of Portfolio to add a mechanism for exporting .ogv (voice over still images) of a portfolio presentation. This is a request that has come from deployments: they'd like to be able to post videos of student work, which is currently available as a slide show with audio voice-over.

Portfolio-Tool.png

A working knowledge of Python and some gstreamer skills are a must.

Contact: User:Walter

Co-mentor: User:Aneesh Dogra

Level: Intermediate

Benefits to the Student: Learn how to master GStreamer

Benefits to the Community: We need more vehicles of expression for our users. Video tools are to scare in Sugar.

Implement collaboration in Paint Activity

Paint Activity does not implement collaboration yet. The easy part is send the mouse positions and draw in the different machines, but you need have the status of the different tools used, copy/paste operations and undo/redo. Another task to do is port the graphics operations to cairo.

Requires familiarity with Python.

Contact: User:Godiard

Level: Beginner

Benefits to the Student: Learn about our collaboration stack

Benefits to the Community: More shared spaces for expression is aligned with our pedagogical goals.

IRC Activity fixes

  • Activities/IRC is built around an all-Python IRC client, Urk which is no longer maintained since 2007. Thus, its better to port the activity to a newer and a better all-python IRC library.
  • Activities/IRC is significantly slower than other IRC clients available on other platforms. The reason being its not multi-threaded. Thus, adding multi-threading support will be very useful.
  • Activities/IRC is missing some useful features including sound on highlight (play a sound when the user is highlighted in a channel), user info (whois data) and many others. Look at some popular IRC clients running on other platforms and research about the features which can be added to Activities/IRC and how can they be added.

Requires familiarity with Python and IRC protocol specifications.

Mentor: User:Aneesh Dogra

Co-mentor: User:RafaelOrtiz

Level: Intermediate

Benefits to the Student: Learn Python and some UI design

Benefits to the Community: We use IRC as the backbone of our community discourse so we should better support it within Sugar itself

Chat Activity with translation

Chat.JPG Above is an example of a chat where two people connected by chat could not talk to each other due to language barrier.

The project task is to add a drop-down box that translates of the chat messages coming from another user similar to the private/shared drop-down menu shown. This could work like the #sugar / #sugar-es channels on IRC.

Contact: User:Satellit

Co-mentor: User:Aneesh Dogra

Level: Intermediate

Benefits to the Student: Learn about machine translation and web services

Benefits to the Community: The better we can accommodate users across multiple languages, the farther we'll reach.