Difference between revisions of "0.82/Notes"
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− | * [http://www.gnome.org/] | + | * [http://www.gnome.org/ GNOME] |
− | * [http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/] | + | * [http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/ freedesktop] |
− | * [http://www.gtk.org/] | + | * [http://www.gtk.org/ Gtk+] |
− | * [http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/dbus] | + | * [http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/dbus dbus] |
− | * [http://www.x.org/wiki/Home] | + | * [http://www.x.org/wiki/Home X Windows System] |
− | * [http://matchbox-project.org/] | + | * [http://matchbox-project.org/ matchbox] |
− | * [http://www.gnome.org/projects/gconf/] | + | * [http://www.gnome.org/projects/gconf/ gconf] |
− | * [http://telepathy.freedesktop.org/wiki/] | + | * [http://telepathy.freedesktop.org/wiki/ telepathy] |
− | * [http://developer.mozilla.org/en/XULRunner] | + | * [http://developer.mozilla.org/en/XULRunner xulrunner] |
− | * [http://www.abisource.com/] | + | * [http://www.abisource.com/ abiword] |
− | * [http://www.squeak.org/] | + | * [http://www.squeak.org/ squeak] |
==Installing Sucrose== | ==Installing Sucrose== |
Revision as of 08:05, 7 October 2008
Sucrose 0.82 Release Notes
Introduction
Sucrose 0.82 is the latest version of the Sugar education platform, consisting of Glucose, the base system environment; and Fructose, a set of demonstration activities.
Sucrose is released every six months and contains many new features, improvements, bug fixes, and translations. Sucrose 0.82 continues this tradition and is our most well-planned release to date.
To learn more about Sugar, visit the Sugar Labs wiki.
What's New For Users
Sugar
Graphical Control Panel
Sucrose 0.82 introduces a graphical user interface to modify the preferences. The command line interface is still available. Due to the request from many users we added an option that you can adjust the activation delay of the frame. The activation by hot corners can be turned off completely. Detailed information on each section and how to use the panel can be found here.
Session management
In previous releases, if you shut down the system without closing the activities you would risk losing your work. This is now fixed, all the user data is saved on shutdown.
New activity startup notification
The new visual feedback for activity startup integrates much better with the zoom level metaphor.
Object chooser improvements
The object chooser allows users to place objects from the journal into activities. In this release, we have added search, filtering, removable devices support, and a much better look.
Multiple layouts in the home view and ability to move icons around
Users have asked insistently for a better way to organize lots of activities in the Sugar shell, so we have implemented new ways to list activities and operate on them.
All installed activities are shown in a list that can be searched. Activities can be removed from there and marked as "favorite". This means that these favorite activities will appear in the more restricted views shown below. The goal is to offer a simpler view with just the most used activities.
Cycling through activities with alt+tab (forward) and alt+shift+tab (backward) has been greatly improved in this release. To aid in finding the activities, the frame will be shown when cycling through windows. In addition the speed has been improved for an overall smooth experience.
Journal
Options in entry palette
As part of the redesign of the journal some options that were only present in the detailed view are now present as well in the main view. The palette associated with each entry icon does provide a quickstart option, the possibility to copy the entry and to erase it from the journal. Another feature is that you can directly edit the title of an entry in the main page by clicking on it.
Launch activity by clicking on thumbnail
You can launch an activity directly from the thumbnail in the detailed view of an entry.
Browse
Autocompletion of bookmarks and history
If you type a word in the address entry you will be presented with a list of sites that you already visited, bookmarked, or saw in a shared browsing session.
Find in context
The search interface, placed in the edit toolbar, let you locate text in the content of a page. You can use the ctrl+f keystroke from any other tab of the browse activity to reveal the focused search entry. The search is type ahead like. You can use enter to get the next occurrence or you can use the next and prev buttons to find other occurrences.
Certificate exceptions
Some websites have custom or invalid SSL certificates, which Browse usually refuse to load for security reasons. Unfortunately this is very common and prevents access to several web sites. We added Firefox 3's feature for the user to make an exception and load the site anyway.
Contextual palettes
Palettes provide secondary information and ways to invoke actions on graphical elements. In this release we have added to Browse the ability to copy links and images to the clipboard (drag and drop is more discoverable but less convenient sometimes) and following links.
Chat
Chat with non-sugar Jabber clients
Computers not running Sugar can initiate Chat connections to Sugar, by running a Jabber (XMPP) client, either with both registered on the same Jabber server or by running a link local XMPP account such as Empathy with salut or Pidgin with Bonjour.
Initiate a chat with the Sugar client:
Sugar will display an invitation to Chat:
This launches the Chat activity:
What's New For Developers
Faisal Anwar has done a fantastic work in documenting the sugar API. This tutorial style guide is a nice starting point for new developers and an interesting read up for the pros.
David Farning has set up a great site where the sugar code can be browsed. The code for the site is based off api.kde.org. The documentation is dynamically generated from the git tree using doxygen and a modified version of kdocs.
Internationalization (i18n) and Localization (l10n)
Thanks to members of the worldwide OLPC Translation Project, who can be found on the localization mailing list, we have the following languages which have significant support (more than 80% of the user interface translated):
- Dutch
- French
- German
- Greek
- Italian
- Japanese
- Kinyarwanda
- Kreyol
- Marathi
- Mongolian
- Nepali
- Sinhala
- Spanish
- Telugu
- Turkish
- Urdu
Moreover, a number of languages have attained "partially supported" status, with more than half of the user interface strings translated.
Getting the sources
If you want to package sugar for your favourite distribution or just want to examine sugar's lovely code ;) you can find all the source code of each module at the links below.
Glucose modules
- sugar-toolkit 0.82.1
- sugar 0.82.0
- sugar-artwork 0.82.0
- sugar-base 0.82.1
- sugar-datastore 0.82.0
- sugar-presence-service 0.82.1
- etoys 3.0.2076
- Journal 97
Fructose modules
- read-activity 49
- chat-activity 45
- terminal-activity 15
- browse-activity 95
- etoys-activity 87
- write-activity 57
- calculate-activity 23
- log-activity 13
- pippy-activity 25
Sugar dependencies
The Sugar interface is based on the GNOME and freedesktop software stacks, using technologies like Gtk+, dbus, xorg, matchbox-window-manager and gconf. It is written in Python, making it easily extended. For the collaboration part, Sugar is using the telepathy framework.
The activities depend on technologies like xulrunner for the browser, abiword for the write activity and squeak for etoys.
Installing Sucrose
- Sucrose 0.82 packages are included with OLPC joyride builds from build 2289.
- Ubuntu packages are available: See Community/Distributions/Ubuntu#Sucrose_0.82
Looking at the release cycle details
You can browse the notes of each development release in ReleaseTeam/Roadmap#Schedule. Their respective sources are listed there as well.
Looking Forward to 0.84
Planning of the next release cycle has started at ReleaseTeam/Roadmap/0.84.
Credits
Many people contributed to this release indirectly, including testing, documentation, translation, contributing to the wiki, outreach to education and developer communities. On behalf of the community, we give our warmest thanks to the developers and contributors who made this Sugar release possible.