Difference between revisions of "Talk:Sugar on a Stick/Linux"
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
===SoaS Fedora matrix=== | ===SoaS Fedora matrix=== | ||
− | {|style="background: #fafafa; padding: 3px; border: 1px solid #cdcdcd" | + | {|cellpadding=3 style="background: #fafafa; padding: 3px; border: 1px solid #cdcdcd" |
!Release<br>name !! SoaS<br>version !! OS<br>version !! disc image files | !Release<br>name !! SoaS<br>version !! OS<br>version !! disc image files | ||
|- | |- |
Revision as of 14:05, 14 September 2009
SoaS Fedora matrix
Release name |
SoaS version |
OS version |
disc image files |
---|---|---|---|
-- | alpha | Fedora 10 | http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/snapshots/1/ |
-- | alpha, beta | Fedora 11 | http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/snapshots/2/ |
-- | beta | Fedora 11 | http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/releases/soas-beta.iso |
Strawberry | v1 | Fedora 11 | http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/releases/soas-strawberry.iso same as http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/snapshots/2/Soas2-200906221314.iso |
-- | v2 alpha, beta | Fedora 12 | http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/snapshots/3/ |
-- | v2 beta | Fedora 12 | http://download.sugarlabs.org/soas/releases/soas-2-beta.iso |
Blueberry | v2 | Fedora 12 |
Remove openSuSE section?
I haven't wanted to remove the openSuSE section because I'm loathe to start another flamewar, but it seems out of place: the page says "This page helps you to put your Sugar on a Stick image on a USB flash drive under Linux.", but the openSuSE section isn't about this. The openSuSE SoaS image is already on the Sugar on a Stick page along with all the other images.
As the openSuSE section is not about how to put a .iso onto a removable drive, does anyone object to it being removed?
No this page is not about how to put an .iso on a removable drive, but how to run sugar-desktop on removable USB/SD drives in Linux. The openSUSE version is a .raw image that is burned to a stick by the dd command. It creates a usb stick that boots sugar-desktop with 55 applications. It is a valid way to access sugar and its applications. I personally think that it belongs here. [satellit 08/02/2009]