Line 5: |
Line 5: |
| == Sugar Digest == | | == Sugar Digest == |
| | | |
− | 1. It has been a few weeks since I posted to the Sugar Digest. I've been buried in a few projects and only just beginning to come up for air. One distraction was that I got a request via Reuben Caron to write a chess activity for Armenia. It was too tempting to resist, so I pulled a few all-nighters that resulted in a Sugar front-end to the gnuchess program. The program, Gnuchess, can be downloaded from [http://activities.sugarlabs.org/en-US/sugar/addon/4593 the Sugar activity portal] and is documented on the [[Activities/Gnuchess]] page in the wiki. Fairly rudimentary, but for a few fun features: you can play against the robot, another person on the same computer, or over the network. You can use a generic set of pieces, load in some Sugar-colored ones, or those of your own design. When you play against someone over the net, they will see your artwork and you'll see their artwork. | + | 1. It has been a few weeks since I posted to the Sugar Digest. I've been buried in a few projects and only just beginning to come up for air. One distraction was that I got a request via Reuben Caron to write a chess activity for Armenia. It was too tempting to resist, so I pulled a few all-nighters that resulted in a Sugar front-end to the gnuchess program. The program, Gnuchess, can be downloaded from [http://activities.sugarlabs.org/en-US/sugar/addon/4593 the Sugar Activity Library] and is documented on the [[Activities/Gnuchess]] page in the wiki. Fairly rudimentary, but for a few fun features: you can play against the robot, another person on the same computer, or over the network. You can use a generic set of pieces, load in some Sugar-colored ones, or those of your own design. When you play against someone over the net, they will see your artwork and you'll see their artwork. |
| | | |
| I also have been making a number of subtle but important changes to Turtle Blocks. Cynthia Solomon (of Logo fame) has been giving me feedback and as a result, I think the box and action naming is much more streamlined and consistent. Check out [http://activities.sugarlabs.org/en-US/sugar/addon/4027 v 154] and keep an eye out for v 156, coming soon. | | I also have been making a number of subtle but important changes to Turtle Blocks. Cynthia Solomon (of Logo fame) has been giving me feedback and as a result, I think the box and action naming is much more streamlined and consistent. Check out [http://activities.sugarlabs.org/en-US/sugar/addon/4027 v 154] and keep an eye out for v 156, coming soon. |
Line 17: |
Line 17: |
| 4. Aleksey Lim and the Somosazucar team continue to make progress on their "Harmonic" distribution, the goal of which is to provide a collaborative Sugar environment in the real-world context of limited network connectivity. See [[Harmonic_Distribution/1.0/Todo|the to-do list]] for a list of milestones already achieved and still to come. The team has been doing some preliminary testing in Puno. | | 4. Aleksey Lim and the Somosazucar team continue to make progress on their "Harmonic" distribution, the goal of which is to provide a collaborative Sugar environment in the real-world context of limited network connectivity. See [[Harmonic_Distribution/1.0/Todo|the to-do list]] for a list of milestones already achieved and still to come. The team has been doing some preliminary testing in Puno. |
| | | |
− | 5. Simon Schampijer and Manuel Quiñones represented Sugar Labs at GUADEC 2012, the GNOME user and developer conference. Simon gave a talk outlining our progress on the GTK-3 port (See items 6 and 7 below). I also participated, remotely, in the advisory board meeting, where I gave a more general update of the project. One theme in my presentation was internationalization. Chris Leonard, our i18n team leader, supplied me with a list of accomplishments and concerns about the state of i18n in GNOME (specifically in glibc). There was an immediate reaction from the board. I am hopefully that we'll see some of Chris's suggested adopted by the GNOME community. | + | 5. Simon Schampijer and Manuel Quiñones represented Sugar Labs at GUADEC 2012, the GNOME user and developer conference. Simon gave a talk outlining our progress on the GTK-3 port (See items 6 and 7 below). I also participated, remotely, in the advisory board meeting, where I gave a more general update of the project. One theme in my presentation was internationalization. Chris Leonard, our i18n team leader, supplied me with a list of accomplishments and concerns about the state of i18n in GNOME (specifically in glibc). There was an immediate reaction from the board. I am hopeful that we'll see some of Chris's suggestions adopted by the GNOME community. |
| | | |
− | 6. Daniel Francis, a product of Plan Ceibal, has been helping with our GTK3 port. A few weeks ago he ported [http://git.sugarlabs.org/~danielf/turtleart/danielfs-gtk3 Turtle Art to GTK3]. We are well on our way to getting our core activities ported thanks in large part to the efforts of our Sugaristas. | + | 6. Daniel Francis, a student from Plan Ceibal, has been helping with our GTK3 port. A few weeks ago he ported [http://git.sugarlabs.org/~danielf/turtleart/danielfs-gtk3 Turtle Art to GTK3]. We are well on our way to getting our core activities ported thanks in large part to the efforts of our Sugaristas. |
| | | |
| 7. Simon posted some instructions for porting Gstreamer Activities to PYGobject and Gstreamer 1.0 to the [http://lists.sugarlabs.org/archive/sugar-devel/2012-July/038700.html Sugar developer list]. | | 7. Simon posted some instructions for porting Gstreamer Activities to PYGobject and Gstreamer 1.0 to the [http://lists.sugarlabs.org/archive/sugar-devel/2012-July/038700.html Sugar developer list]. |