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| ## Sugar on a Stick is a project that "enables children to reclaim computers". It's a project that reaches even further than other approaches seen before, as it significantly lowers the entry barrier for people to get their hands on their own personalized Sugar Learning Experience. By making this experience even better -- which is what this project aims for -- the general improvements arrive at one of Sugar's main ways of distribution. However, Sugar on a Stick is not just a distribution, it's a way of deploying Sugar. Successful pilots are taking off right now in Berlin and Boston and these kids there won't be the only ones to get their hands on the resulting improvements. Instead, the improvements will be included in the next iteration of Sugar on a Stick, enabling them to interact directly with our developers, resulting in a better product. [[User:Sdz| Sebastian Dziallas]] | | ## Sugar on a Stick is a project that "enables children to reclaim computers". It's a project that reaches even further than other approaches seen before, as it significantly lowers the entry barrier for people to get their hands on their own personalized Sugar Learning Experience. By making this experience even better -- which is what this project aims for -- the general improvements arrive at one of Sugar's main ways of distribution. However, Sugar on a Stick is not just a distribution, it's a way of deploying Sugar. Successful pilots are taking off right now in Berlin and Boston and these kids there won't be the only ones to get their hands on the resulting improvements. Instead, the improvements will be included in the next iteration of Sugar on a Stick, enabling them to interact directly with our developers, resulting in a better product. [[User:Sdz| Sebastian Dziallas]] |
| ## Sugar on a Stick is a cornerstone of the Sugar Labs strategy for reaching out to parents, teachers, and children. It provides a simple way for someone to give Sugar a test drive and it provides a cost-effective way to initiate and expand Sugar-based deployments (every child can use Sugar even though not every child can yet be given a computer of their own). This GSoC project is addresses some critical aspects of the Sugar-on-a-Stick project: user feedback and documentation. Specifically, the integration of Smolt will greatly enhance our ability to monitor the conditions under which Sugar on a Stick is being used, capturing a detailed record that will be invaluable to the development and support teams as they strive to make the project both more far reaching and robust. While it is not glamorous, it is critical to our being able to sustain and support Sugar on the variety of hardware found in the field. [[User:Walter| Walter Bender]] | | ## Sugar on a Stick is a cornerstone of the Sugar Labs strategy for reaching out to parents, teachers, and children. It provides a simple way for someone to give Sugar a test drive and it provides a cost-effective way to initiate and expand Sugar-based deployments (every child can use Sugar even though not every child can yet be given a computer of their own). This GSoC project is addresses some critical aspects of the Sugar-on-a-Stick project: user feedback and documentation. Specifically, the integration of Smolt will greatly enhance our ability to monitor the conditions under which Sugar on a Stick is being used, capturing a detailed record that will be invaluable to the development and support teams as they strive to make the project both more far reaching and robust. While it is not glamorous, it is critical to our being able to sustain and support Sugar on the variety of hardware found in the field. [[User:Walter| Walter Bender]] |
− | ## ''[comment needed -- commenter 2]'' | + | ## Sugar on a Stick is a bridge between the Fedora and Sugar communities as well as other upstream communities. Increasing the ability for the users to work with both projects through hardware profiles and issue reporting is going to be a significant benefit for both projects. Integration of upstream projects within the Sugar environment whether it be in the Control Panel or as Activities are also going ensure good compatibilty within the projects. The reuse of code allows provisioning of advanced features within Sugar quickly and allows the Sugar community to easily contribute upstream to the Fedora community in testing and bug reporting while reuse of code and functions within the upstream community. Integration of Smolt, ABRT and PackageKit will provide advanced functionality in Sugar while allowing the Sugar community to easily contribute to upstream communities for the benefit to both. [[User:Pbrobinson| Peter Robinson]] |
| # Sugar Labs will be working to set up a small (5-30 unit) Sugar pilot near each student project that is accepted to GSoC so that you can immediately see how your work affects children in a deployment. We will make arrangements to either supply or find all the equipment needed. Do you have any ideas on where you would like your deployment to be, who you would like to be involved, and how we can help you and the community in your area begin it? | | # Sugar Labs will be working to set up a small (5-30 unit) Sugar pilot near each student project that is accepted to GSoC so that you can immediately see how your work affects children in a deployment. We will make arrangements to either supply or find all the equipment needed. Do you have any ideas on where you would like your deployment to be, who you would like to be involved, and how we can help you and the community in your area begin it? |
| #* I've been leading and coordinating technical support for a small XO deployment in a school here. While this might be an option, there are also other Sugar on a Stick related deployments currently going on in Berlin (Simon) and Boston (Mel) -- cooperating with these might be a good way of getting actual results from the field. | | #* I've been leading and coordinating technical support for a small XO deployment in a school here. While this might be an option, there are also other Sugar on a Stick related deployments currently going on in Berlin (Simon) and Boston (Mel) -- cooperating with these might be a good way of getting actual results from the field. |