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#* Sweets is not intended to create one more GNU/Linux distribution. It distributes only projects that people create within the Sugar community; all other software, i.e., dependencies, will be reused from native packages.
 
#* Sweets is not intended to create one more GNU/Linux distribution. It distributes only projects that people create within the Sugar community; all other software, i.e., dependencies, will be reused from native packages.
 
#* For cases like Sugar deployments, using the more centralized, regular repositories (third party or official GNU/Linux distributions with native packages) makes more sense. These native packages of Sugar software will be included in Sweets, as well. When people start using Sweets on top of these Sugar distributions, they will have the chance to choose between natively packaged Sugar components and components that came directly from software creators.
 
#* For cases like Sugar deployments, using the more centralized, regular repositories (third party or official GNU/Linux distributions with native packages) makes more sense. These native packages of Sugar software will be included in Sweets, as well. When people start using Sweets on top of these Sugar distributions, they will have the chance to choose between natively packaged Sugar components and components that came directly from software creators.
#* It is possible, when there is a need, to automatically package sweets into native packages. See [[Platform_Team/Sweets_Distribution|Sweets Distribution]], for example.
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#* It is possible, when there is a need, to automatically package sweets into native packages. See [[Community/Distributions/Sweets_Distribution|Sweets Distribution]], for example.
    
See also the initial release [[Platform_Team/Sweets/1.0/Notes|notes]].
 
See also the initial release [[Platform_Team/Sweets/1.0/Notes|notes]].

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