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This page is updated each week (usually on Monday morning) with notes from the Sugar Labs community. (The digest is also sent to the community-news at sugarlabs.org list, blogged at walterbender.org, and archived here.) If you would like to contribute, please send email to walter at sugarlabs.org by the weekend. (Also visit planet.sugarlabs.org.)
Sugar Digest
On the unspoken truth behind the education system
Calvin: As you can see, I have memorized this utterly useless piece of information long enough to pass a test question. I now intend to forget it forever. You’ve taught me nothing except how to cynically manipulate the system. Congratulations. -- Bill Watterson
1. Akarsh Sanghi asked me some questions about computing for a survey he is conducting. I thought I would share some of my answers here.
- How do you think future technologies in the field of human-computer interaction (HCI) affect the daily lives of people? [In context of the rapture of interactive and touch based devices like the iPhone & iPad]
- I think that HCI has little impact. Yes, things arguably get easier to use, but ease of use is not the gating factor in the use of these devices. It is access and utility. Also, it is important to note that very few of the touch-based interfaces represent advances in HCI. These are old ideas (most from the 1970s) that are only finally becoming commercially viable.
- How do you think interactive technologies affect the learning process in primary education? Will these form of technologies help to expand the horizon of a child growing up in practically a virtual world?
- Well, somewhat in contradiction to my previous answer, touch does make a difference to very young children, for whom hand-eye coordination is still an issue. As far as learning, I am skeptical of the premise that the virtual world is particularly relevant. I think the character of the tasks the children engage in is far more important than the technology. The advantage of some small subset of the technology is that facilitates engaging children in authentic open-ended problem solving. Making worksheets electronic games is a complete waste of time (although it may help the children pass an exam to measure how quickly they can do worksheets.)
- As a part of the Sugar Labs community, I would like to ask you where does it stand in the future?
- Sugar, the learning platform developed and maintained by the Sugar Labs community, is about giving children an opportunity to use technologies to engage in authentic open-ended problem solving. We'll continue down this path, trying to reach more children in more contexts (laptops, desktops, phones, tablets, etc.)
- SugarLabs and the OLPC projects are primarily targeted towards developing nations and their education system, do you think the education system in a country like America should also be put under consideration and be directed more towards a student’s own creative thought process?
- Sugar Labs is trying reach children everywhere: north or south, rich or poor. We have programs in every corner of the globe.
- Every time while discussing OLPC, one hears about Constructionism. Is the Constructionist approach a guiding or necessary aspect of distributing laptops to children for learning? For designing an interface for them? Why or why not?
- Constructionism is completely orthogonal to the problem of distributing laptops. But not to the problem of using laptops for learning. (This is where Mr. Negroponte and I differed in our approach.) You can give a child a laptop and they will learn to use it (See my answer to the first question), but will they learn to use it for learning? Not likely unless we craft an environment in which they are encouraged to “imagine and realize, critique and reflect, and iterate.” That is a constructionist environment.
- How do you think Seymour Papert’s theory of constructionism should be applied in the today’s time? Should people be involved in developing tangible objects in the real world to understand concepts or follow experiential learning processes to gain insight into the world around them?
- Not sure what you mean by “tangible objects”. I think more in terms of authentic problems. Some of those problems may be tangible.
- How do you think Electronic Publishing is evolving with the rapid development of reading devices like iPad, NOOK, Kindle and the major use of ebooks?
- To me, the interesting questions are more along the lines of: Who will write books? What will be the relationship between reading and writing? What is the future of copyright and the commercialization of writing.
- Do you think in the near future this kind of electronic publishing will hamper the growth of children as they will be devoid of physically reading a book and understand the values that come along with it?
- I think that the difference is not so much paper vs plastic; but rather, to what extent does an electronic interface afford the freedom to write and share margin notes (or the books themselves) to engage in personal expression, etc. The physicality of electronic media is not the issue.
- In context of the famous phrase by Marshal McLuhan, “medium is the message”, how do you think technology will evolve in the coming years? All forms of communication and information will be the material itself rather than a separate physical device.
- McLuhan was wrong. The message is the message. We use different media to deliver it, more or less intact.
2. Sugar Labs is applying to Google Code-in (GCI), "a contest for pre-university students (e.g., high school and secondary school students) with the goal of encouraging young people to participate in open source."
Why we are applying? Sugar is written and maintained by volunteers, who range from seasoned professionals to children as young as 12-years of age. Children who have grown up with Sugar have transitioned from Sugar users to Sugar App developers to Sugar maintainers. They hang out on IRC with the global Sugar developer community and are full-fledged members of the Sugar development team. It is this latter group of children we hope will participate in and benefit from Google Code-in. Specifically we want to re-enforce the message that Sugar belongs to its users and that they have both ownership and the responsibility that ownership implies. Just as learning is not something done to you, but something you do, learning with Sugar ultimately means participating in the Sugar development process. At Sugar Labs, we are trying to bring the culture of Free Software into the culture of school. So the Code-in is not just an opportunity for us to get some tasks accomplished, it is quintessential to our overall mission.
Learn more about GCI. The SL GCI page
3. Agustin Zubiaga Sanchez noted that last week we passed the threshold of more than eight million activities downloaded from the Sugar Labs activity portal. I echo his sentiment that "I'm very glad to be a sugarlabs developer. Congratulations to all the team :)"
4. Last weekend was the OLPC SF summit in San Francisco, which was followed by a three-day Sugar Camp. Although I missed opening day, Day Two was quite interesting in that there was a lot of good discussion about how to sustain and grow the various volunteer-run OLPC/Sugar deployments. At Sugar Camp, although not much code was written, there was an opportunity to get tangible and actionable feedback from the likes of Mark Bradley (we pushed hard on Turtle Art as a multimedia toolkit). I also had the opportunity to catch up with Raul Gutierrez Segales, Ivan Krstić, and others.
Tech Talk
5. The little coding I did do in San Francisco was in support of migrating more activities to touch. Specifically, I worked on integrating the on-screen keyboard into several of my activities: Portfolio and Turtle Blocks. The challenge was that I was using key-press events directly, rather than accessing them through a GTK widget such as a Entry or TextView. With help from Raul, I managed to get things working pretty well: basically, I just drop a TextView widget under the cursor where I expect keyboard input. The details are outlined in the wiki. I'm generally pleased with the results, but there is a bit of fine-tuning of the interaction, e.g, you need to defocus the TextView in order to dismiss it: not such a burden, but at times, somewhat awkward.
6. Ignacio Rodriguez has been on a tear, helping me to migrate activities to GTK 3. Over the past week, we converted: Card Sort, Cookie Search, Color Deducto, Deducto, Flip, Fraction Bounce, Loco Sugar, Napier's Bones, Nutrition, Paths, Pukllananpac, Recall, Reflection, GNUChess, Sliderule, Story, Yupana, and XO Editor. I also worked with Agustin Zubiaga on Portfolio, Flavio Denesse on Ruler, and Daniel Francis on Turtle Blocks. Whew.
Sugar Labs
Visit our planet for more updates about Sugar and Sugar deployments.
An archive of this digest is available.
Planet
The Sugar Labs Planet is found here.
Sugar in the news
07 Sep 2012 |
NDTV – One Laptop Per Child initiative a hit in rural India
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08 Jul 2012 |
Estado de S. Paulo – Para educar
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24 Apr 2012 |
Pacific Standard – OLPC Redux
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12 Apr 2012 |
Huffington Post – Hult Global Case Challenge: One Laptop Per Child
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30 Mar 2012 |
newswise – “Sugar on a Stick” Helps Kids Learn How to Learn
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11 Jan 2012 |
Boston Herald – One Laptop Per Child screening $100 tablet
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10 Jan 2012 |
ars technica – Crank, bicycle, and waterwheel: hands-on with the OLPC XO 3.0 tablet
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08 Jan 2012 |
The Verge – OLPC XO 3.0 tablet preview: impressions, video, and pictures
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07 Jan 2012 |
The Verge – OLPC XO 3.0 tablet: an 8-inch tablet for $100, with Android and Sugar options for the children
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23 Dec 2011 |
Miller-McCune – One Laptop Per Child Redux
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18 Oct 2011 |
BDU – Robotics in Uruguay (video)
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11 Aug 2011 |
Berlin.de – Gewinner des Berliner Landeswettbewerbs zu Open Source stehen fest
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25 Jul 2011 |
CCC Classic – Garmin-sugarlabs development cycling team at Crit starting line
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25 Jul 2011 |
CCC Classic – Garmin-sugarlabs development cycling team after Crit
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13 Apr 2011 |
framablog – L'expérience Sugar Labs préfigure-t-elle une révolution éducative du XXIe siècle?
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05 Apr 2011 |
Businesswire – The Government of Peru Expands the One Laptop Per Child Program with Local Manufacturing
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31 Jan 2011 |
Sundance – A Day in the Life – Peru
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01 Dec 2010 |
velonation – Sugar Labs to back Garmin-Cervelo’s development team in unique arrangement
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28 Oct 2010 |
UCR – Nuevas tecnologías deben estar al alcance de todos los niños y niñas
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05 Oct 2010 |
xconomy – One Ecosystem per Child
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08 Sep 2010 |
FLOSS Weekly – Sugar Labs
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09 Aug 2010 |
ABC digital – Indicadores constatan el impacto positivo en el aprendizaje de niños
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23 Jun 2010 |
ABC digital – Xo para todas las escuelas de Caacupé
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21 Jun 2010 |
La Nacion – “Buscamos que los niños no solo usen softwares, sino que puedan crear uno”
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20 Jun 2010 |
UltimaHora.com – La laptop une a padres, alumnos y docentes
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15 Jun 2010 |
The H – OLPC XO-1.5 software updated
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10 Jun 2010 |
engadget – Sugar on a Stick hits 3.0, teaches us about a new kind of fruit
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27 May 2010 |
Pro Linux DE – Sugar on a Stick v3 freigegeben (German)
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27 May 2010 |
NY Times – One Laptop Per Child Project Works With Marvell to Produce a $100 Tablet
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27 May 2010 |
PC World – OLPC Rules out Windows for XO-3
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03 May 2010 |
WXXI: Mixed Media – Interview with Walter Bender (audio)
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03 May 2010 |
Linux Magazine – OLPC Computers for Palestinian Refugee Children
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14 Apr 2010 |
National Science Foundation – XO Laptops Inspire Learning In Birmingham, Alabama (video)
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02 Apr 2010 |
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15 Mar 2010 |
nbc13.com – Birmingham City students opt to spend spring break in class, XO computer camps (video)
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18 Feb 2010 |
LWN – Karma targets easier creation of educational software
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05 Feb 2010 |
iprofesional – La PC barata de Negroponte desembarca en la Argentina para pelear contra Intel
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14 Jan 2010 |
AALF – Open Systems for Broader Change
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03 Jan 2010 |
Educacion 2.0 – PLAN CEIBAL, El Libro
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14 Dec 2009 |
xconomy – Sugar gets sweeter
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10 Dec 2009 |
ars technica – Sugar software environment gets sweeter with version 2
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09 Dec 2009 |
Wired – New Sugar on a Stick Brings Much Needed Improvements
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08 Dec 2009 |
engadget – Sugar on a Stick OS goes to 2.0, gets Blueberry coating and creamy Fedora 12 center (video)
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07 Dec 2009 |
Teleread.org – Sugar on a Stick: What it means for e-books and education
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27 Nov 2009 |
CNET Japan – 「コードを見せて、もっと良くなるよ」と言える子どもが生まれる--Sugar Labsが描く未来
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16 Nov 2009 |
zanichelli – software libero a scuola
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12 Nov 2009 |
opensuse.org – openSUSE 11.2 Released
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07 Nov 2009 |
My Broadband News – Mandriva 2010 packs a punch [and Sugar]
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06 Nov 2009 |
GhanaWeb – Open education and an IT-enabled economic growth in Ghana: Musings of a dutiful citizen
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26 Oct 2009 |
Linux Magazine ES – Software Libre como apoyo al aprendizaje
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09 Oct 2009 |
interdisciplines – OLPC and Sugar: mobility through the community
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08 Oct 2009 |
IBM developerWorks – 10 important Linux developments everyone should know about
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01 Oct 2009 |
OLPC France – Interview Walter Bender au SugarCamp
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25 Sep 2009 |
The Inquirer – One Laptop per Child marches on
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18 Sep 2009 |
Groklaw – The Role of Free Software in Education
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18 Sep 2009 |
Reuters – Sugar Labs and Free Software Foundation Celebrate Software Freedom Day
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17 Sep 2009 |
ICTDev.org – Dream Again with One Laptop per Child
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26 Aug 2009 |
Latinux – Azúcar en una memoria USB
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03 Aug 2009 |
Wired: Geek Dad – Inventing a New Paradigm: SugarLabs and the Sugar UI
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30 Jul 2009 |
Zanichelli – Sugar on a Stick: imparare insieme
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23 Jul 2009 |
Everything USB – RecycleUSB.com - Donate your Flash Drives for a Good Cause
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22 Jul 2009 |
OLPC France – Sugar : mauvaise presse et mise au point
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13 Jul 2009 |
Spiegel Online – Das zuckersüße Leichtbau-Linux
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07 Jul 2009 |
ComputerWorldUK – Gran Canaria Desktop Summit: a Study in Contrasts
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06 Jul 2009 |
Windows Forest – USBメモリなどから“OLPC”用のOSを利用できる「Sugar on a Stick」が無償公開
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02 Jul 2009 |
Howard County Library – Sugar on a Stick
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27 Jun 2009 |
Deutschlandfunk – Süßes für die Kleinen: Sugar ist Linux speziell für Kinder (in Deutsch)
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26 Jun 2009 |
EduTech – Sugar on a stick, and other delectables (praise for the lowly USB drive)
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26 Jun 2009 |
ars technica – Sugar on a Stick brings sweet taste of Linux to classrooms
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24 Jun 2009 |
BBC – OLPC software to power aging PCs
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24 Jun 2009 |
Technology Review – $100 Laptop Becomes a $5 PC
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15 Jun 2009 |
TechSavvyKids – Episode 10 FOSSVT: Sugar on a Stick (audio)
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10 Jun 2009 |
LWN.net – Sugar moves from the shadow of OLPC
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27 May 2009 |
LWN.net – Activities and the move to context-oriented desktops (subscriber link)
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27 May 2009 |
Business Wire – Dailymotion Launches Support for Open Video Formats and Video HTML Tag
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01 May 2009 |
Guysoft – Nokia N810 Running OLPC Sugar
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29 Apr 2009 |
El Mercurio – Así se vivió la fiesta del software libre
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27 Apr 2009 |
ostatic – Sugar on a Stick: Good for Kids' Minds (and School Budgets)
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25 Apr 2009 |
Free Software Magazine – The Bittersweet Facts about OLPC and Sugar
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24 Apr 2009 |
ars technica – First taste: Sugar on a Stick learning platform
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22 Apr 2009 |
Betanews – Beta of Live USB Sugar OS opens
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27 Mar 2009 |
Mass High Tech – Google promotes summer open-source internships
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18 Mar 2009 |
Metropolis – A Good Argument
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16 Mar 2009 |
Laptop Magazine – Sugar Labs’ New Version of Sugar Learning Platform Is Netbook and PC Ready
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16 Mar 2009 |
Market Watch – Sugar Labs Nonprofit Announces New Version of Sugar Learning Platform for Children, Runs on Netbooks and PCs
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14 Feb 2009 |
OLPC Learning Club – DC – Learning Learning on a Stick
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05 Feb 2009 |
xconomy – Sugar Beyond the XO Laptop: Walter Bender on OLPC, Sucrose 0.84, and “Sugar on a Stick”
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26 Jan 2009 |
Linus Magazine – Sugar Defies OLPC Cutbacks
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19 Jan 2009 |
Feeding the Penguins – The status of Sugar, post-OLPC
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16 Jan 2009 |
OLPC News – Sugar on Acer Aspire One & Thin Client via LTSP
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12 Jan 2009 |
Bill Kerr – thoughts about olpc cutbacks
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07 Jan 2009 |
ars technica – OLPC downsizes half of its staff, cuts Sugar development
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06 Jan 2009 |
OLPC News – An Inside Look at how Microsoft got XP on the XO
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30 Dec 2008 |
OLPC News – Sugar Labs Status at Six Months
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22 Dec 2008 |
The GNOME Project – Sugar Labs, the nonprofit behind the OLPC software, is joining the GNOME Foundation
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16 Dec 2008 |
Feeding the Penguins – Sugar git repository change
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14 Dec 2008 |
NPR – Laptop Deal Links Rural Peru To Opportunity, Risk (Part 2)
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13 Dec 2008 |
NPR – Laptops May Change The Way Rural Peru Learns (Part 1)
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09 Dec 2008 |
SFC – Sugar Labs joins Conservancy
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31 Oct 2008 |
Linux Devices – An OLPC dilemma: Linux or Windows?
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10 Oct 2008 |
Feeding the Penguin – Sugar on Ubuntu
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21 Sep 2008 |
Groklaw – Interview with Walter Bender of Sugar Labs
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17 Sep 2008 |
Bill Kerr – Sugar Labs
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16 Sep 2008 |
Open Source – Sugar everywhere
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28 Aug 2008 |
OLPC News – An answer to Walter Bender's question 22
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20 Aug 2008 |
OLPC News – Sugarize it: Intel Classmate 2
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08 Aug 2008 |
Investor's Business Daily – 'Learning' Vs. Laptop Was Issue
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06 Aug 2008 |
OLPC News – Twenty-three Questions on Technology and Education
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18 Jul 2008 |
Bill Kerr – evaluating Sugar in the developed world
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28 Jun 2008 |
OLPC News – A Cutting Edge Sugar User Interface Demo
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18 Jun 2008 |
PC World – OLPC Spin-off Developing UI for Intel's Classmate PC
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17 Jun 2008 |
Datamation – If Business Succeeds with GNU/Linux, Why Not OLPC?
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11 Jun 2008 |
LinuxInsider – The Sweetness of Collaborative Learning
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06 Jun 2008 |
Bill Kerr – untangling Free, Sugar, and Constructionism
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06 Jun 2008 |
Open Education – Walter Bender Discusses Sugar Labs Foundation
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06 Jun 2008 |
BusinessWeek – OLPC: The Educational Philosophy Controversy
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05 Jun 2008 |
Code Culture – The Distraction Machine
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05 Jun 2008 |
BusinessWeek – OLPC: The Open-Source Controversy
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27 May 2008 |
The New York Times – Why Walter Bender Left One Laptop Per Child
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26 May 2008 |
ars technica – OLPC software maker splits from X0 hardware, goes solo
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22 May 2008 |
BetaNews – Linux start-up Sugar Labs in informal talks with four laptop makers
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16 May 2008 |
OSTATIC – OLPC's Open Source Sugar Platform Aims for New Hardware
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16 May 2008 |
PCWorld – Bender Forms Group to Promote OLPC's Sugar UI
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16 May 2008 |
MHT – Bender jumps from OLPC, founds Sugar Labs
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16 May 2008 |
News.com – Sugar Labs will make OLPC interface available for Eee PC, others
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16 May 2008 |
Feeding the Peguins – The future of Sugar
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16 May 2008 |
Sugar list – A few thoughts on SugarLabs
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16 May 2008 |
xconomy – Bender Creates Sugar Labs—New Foundation to Adapt OLPC’s Laptop Interface for Other Machines
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16 May 2008 |
BBC – '$100 laptop' platform moves on
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15 May 2008 |
OLPC wiki – Dual-boot XO Claim: OLPC will not work to port Sugar to Windows.
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16 May 2008 |
Softpedia – Bender Launches Sugar Labs for Better Development of OLPC's Sugar UI
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Press releases
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