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− | Sugar can be run on a Raspberry Pi; | + | Raspberry Pi are a series of small, low cost, low power computers. |
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| + | Sugar can be run on a Raspberry Pi. You will need a display, keyboard and mouse. |
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| + | As of July 2017, the best to use is Sugar on a Stick, as it has many activities and is regularly released. See [[Sugar on a Stick/Raspberry Pi]] for how to download and install it. Sugar on a Stick is a spin of Fedora. |
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| + | Other methods are; |
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| * using [[Raspbian]], the most common operating system on a Raspberry Pi, a derivative of Debian, | | * using [[Raspbian]], the most common operating system on a Raspberry Pi, a derivative of Debian, |
− | * using [[Sugar on a Stick]], see [[Soas/Raspberry Pi]] for how to install with many activities,
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| * using [[Fedora]], | | * using [[Fedora]], |
| * using [[Debian]], or see [[Debian/Raspberry Pi]] for how to install a prototype image with one or two activities, | | * using [[Debian]], or see [[Debian/Raspberry Pi]] for how to install a prototype image with one or two activities, |
− | * using [[Ubuntu]], or see [[Ubuntu on rpi3]] for a test report on how to install the MATE desktop and Sugar, | + | * using [[Ubuntu]], or see [[Ubuntu on rpi3]] for a test report on how to install the MATE desktop and Sugar. |
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| + | Developers may focus on [[Fedora]] or [[Debian]] when setting up a development environment for Sugar on Raspberry Pi, because Sugar development on generic computers is focused on those operating systems. |