Out of curiosity, what's missing that would make it usable. If its activity packages, then that could be remedied by packaging, which is relatively straight forward and would require choosing which activities should be bundled for edubuntu sugar. Other distros seem to be quite subjective when choosing what's bundled, although it would be easy enough to replicate what's available from either Fedora or openSUSE.
The quitting option is also just a little code hack to get logout to exit properly. I'd be happy to help with both of these, if there is real interest in having Sugar distributed on edubuntu. kind regards, David Van Assche On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 5:02 PM, Jonathan Carter (highvoltage) < [email protected]> wrote: > Hi! > > At UDS there was discussion about Sugar and that we should look at it > again for inclusion for Edubuntu. Previously the packaging was either > not available or in a state of flux or the current state of Sugar was > just not usable. > > I briefly looked at it again a few weeks ago, and in my opinion it's > still not something that we should include. The amount of activities is > still on the sparse side, and once you start the Sugar interface there's > no intuitive way to quit it. > > I don't think this is something we should include in Edubuntu, and for > people that really want it, it's still an easy installation and there's > an existing Ubuntu Sugar remix disc for people who would like to run a > live system or install it as a single system. > > Any thoughts? > > -Jonathan > > -- > edubuntu-devel mailing list > [email protected] > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-devel >
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