[Sugar-devel] Sugar Labs Roadmap. [SD 61;79]
Daniel Narvaez
dwnarvaez at gmail.com
Sun Nov 10 13:07:58 EST 2013
Hi,
very nice analysis, thanks a lot. Let me focus on a couple of points
- Sell for 1.99$. I feel that building business around Sugar might be
essential for its survival. And I like the idea, it seems like it might
even work! (I have no clue about business, mind you :P).
Though I'm not sure this is something Sugar Labs can do at this point. It
would start competing with the bits of business ecosystem that have been
built around it, and that feels wrong.
- Porting native Sugat to Android. I researched this a bit a while ago... I
think it would be a lot work, the GNOME stack is big and not very cross
platform, and Android is pretty unfriendly to native libraries porting. It
would also most likely be very expensive to maintain, especially since I
don't see the GNOME community buying a lot into it. Finally I don't think
GNOME has much of a future as a platform, we will need to move away from it
at some point anyway. These are the reason we decide to migrate to a cross
platform toolkit (html5) first.
I also don't see the Sugar community doing that work, it requires skills
which are not very common around here. That said, I think a company could
hire people and do it, it's not rocket science.
On Sunday, 10 November 2013, Yioryos Asprobounitis wrote:
> >
> > Does anyone else want to add their thoughts on:
> >
>
> These are all good for now but without the "safety" of the 2-3 million
> default users, SL can not just be the "upstream". There are some more
> fundamental questions now that we need to compete in the "open market".
>
> In a nutshell, whom do we target and which of _their_ needs do we cover
> better than the competition?
>
> 1) Are we targeting (the educational department of) Governments? (ie
> become OLPC-A)
> 2) Are we targeting OEMs? (ie find OLPC-A replacements. Are there any?).
> If yes, which needs of *theirs* do we satisfy better than the competition?
> 3) Are we targeting existing hardware and if yes, only those already
> running GNU/Linux? (The vast majority of hardware in and out of schools
> although it can, does not run GNU/linux let along Fedora, and is very
> likely to stay that way by just adding Android and iOS)
>
> The current html5/js course suggests "door no 3", but I have a hard time
> thinking of something that runs in Windows XP-8.1, OSX 10.6-10.9, major
> flavors GNU/Linux, iOS and Android 4.x all at the same time and all well!
> Not even browsers, let along a UX within a browser.
>
>
> This "open market" course also require some change in the development
> philosophy.
> Do we still tell people how things should be done (a la Apple - and GNOME
> lately) or do we listen to their needs, experience and priorities? If yes
> which ones? Kids, parents, teachers, local/support techs, funding sources,
> all of the above (can we)?
> Do we place Sugar next/parallel to other edu-apps or the "Sugar Desktop"
> is "mandatory"? If the latter, do we integrate (fully sugarize) other apps
> or stick with our native repertoire?
>
> That's a lot of questions with no answers and I can appreciate that these
> can not be addressed or affect sugar .102 or .104 but they may need to be
> decided soon for sugar .106 to materialize.
>
>
> I also think that options 1 and 2 need a much stronger political cloud and
> a political environment of yesterdays to materialize.
> So let me suggest option #4 that I'm sure will "raise some eyebrows" (and
> hopefully not too much more than that :-) Today handhelds have really
> provided cheap and energy efficient computing and communications, and their
> penetrance is increasing rapidly around the globe.
> Thus, build native Sugar for Tablets/Smartphones and *SELL* it for $1.99
> through Google Play (and/or AppStore) :-o
> Obviously, provide the code and a way for rooted (or jail-broken) devices
> to install it for free, but people/organizations that opt for specific
> quality "locked" hardware and the Sugar software stack QA'ed and supported,
> must contribute (a token really) to its development. If you think of it is
> like what RHEL is doing and actually much cheaper. Or what OLPC was doing
> paying developers to develop software for the hardware that was *selling*
> to users.
>
> I can appreciate that this "open market approach" is a major shift in the
> culture (but not the reality) of the community from "educational software
> politics and policies" to "proven educational software quality". But isn't
> quality what we primarily want from educational software?
> Although there is plenty of room for improvement, Sugar has this quality
> and an installed base to support this claim, and should not be afraid of
> this course.
> A strong market presence and user endorsement is actually much better than
> any PR event or political/academic endorsement in enhancing its appeal and
> removing the "3rd world/class" label from the project.
> So please consider distributing Sugar .106 through GooglePlay/Appstore!
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--
Daniel Narvaez
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