Bert Freudenberg wrote to the Squeak-dev mailing list to announce a meeting of German-speaking squeakers. The meeting will take place on Saturday, May 12th at 17:00 in Potsdam, Germany, at the Hasso Plattner Institut.
Author: gcorriga
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Help improving the Smalltalk experience on the OLPC machine
As you may now, the XO laptops produced by the One Laptop Per Child project include a Squeak/Etoys image in the base software. The OLPC developers decided to hide the Smalltalk development enviroment and highlight the Etoys subsystem, since that’s the part that matters in a kids machine such as the XO.
But the power of a full-fledged Smalltalk system is still there, and you can help. As Bert Freudenberg writes to the Squeak Beginners mailing list:
So everybody interested in making the “Smalltalk experience” on the OLPC machine an enjoyable one, please help. The VPRI group focuses on etoys and system integration, but you are invited to contribute. And, in case this has not been clear, you do *not* need an OLPC prototype to run this. It’s Squeak, after all.
More info on how to run the OLPC version of Squeak and Etoys on your system may be found here.
Update: changed a misleading statement.
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Thot talks about Squeak, Etoys and V-Toys
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From the Press Room: Squeak At 2007 Smalltalk Solutions Conference
The Squeak environment and Squeak products will be demonstrated at the Smalltalk Solutions Conference: a part of the 2007 IT360 Technology Conference and Trade Show in Toronto, Canada.Toronto, Canada – 2 April, 2007. Continuing the tradition started in Karlsruhe, the Squeak community (www.Squeak.org) will host another trade show booth at the Smalltalk Solutions Conference 30, April through 2, May in Toronto, Ontario. The booth will demonstrate Squeak and a variety of Squeak products such as Seaside, eToys, and Morphic. We encourage all to visit (Booth #627) and experience the power of Squeak today.
About Squeak: Squeak is a modern, open source full-featured implementation of the powerful Smalltalk programming language and environment and the vehicle for a wide range of projects from multimedia applications, educational platforms to commercial web application development. Squeak has attracted many of the best and most experienced Smalltalk programmers and implementers in the world. Learn more about Squeak at: www.Squeak.org.
Media Contact:
Chris Cunnington
Seaside Parasol (416) 967-6309
Cunnington@sympatico.caSqueak Press Room reference: http://www.squeak.org/PressRoom/SqueakAt2007SmalltalkSolutionsConference/
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From the Press Room: Squeak Badge Fund Raiser Campaign
Squeak community to raise money with Silver and Gold Squeak Pledge Badges
Bern, Switzerland – 2 April, 2007. Bryce Kampjes is the first official recipient of the new Gold-level Squeak supporter badge. As part of the Squeak Foundation’s new badge fund raiser, Mr. Kampjes stepped forward to support the growth of the Squeak community (www.Squeak.org) Silver-level donations begin at $US 10 and Gold-level donations begin at $US 50. The badges will be available at the Squeak booth (Booth #627) at the Smalltalk Solutions show April through 2, May in Toronto, Ontario. The booth will demonstrate Squeak and a variety of Squeak products such as Seaside, eToys, and Morphic. More information about the Squeak Foundation and how to purchase badges can be found at www.Squeak.org.
About Squeak: Squeak is a modern, open source full-featured implementation of the powerful Smalltalk programming language and environment and the vehicle for a wide range of projects from multimedia applications, educational platforms to commercial web application development. Squeak has attracted many of the best and most experienced Smalltalk programmers and implementers in the world. Learn more about Squeak at: www.Squeak.org.
Media Contact:
William Harford
i/oTrak
(416) 907-1078
pr@harford.orgSqueak Press Room reference: http://www.squeak.org/PressRoom/SqueakBadgeFundRaiserCampaign/
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Plopp, The Cool 3D Painting Tool is now available for download
Grit Schuster writes:
Plopp, the cool 3D painting tool is now ready for downloading at www.planet-plopp.com!
Plopp is the first painting tool for kids where you can paint 3D objects very easily! Just paint in 2D and Plopp will transform your paintings into 3D objects! Friendly and helpful Plipp will assist you. If you can do without help (and Plipp), try one of the versions for “professionals”. There are a number of different themes available, each coming with extra templates. Current available themes are Classic, Space, On the Farm, Horse-Riding, Wild West, Knight Castle and Aqua for grown-ups.All Plopp versions are available for Windows 98,2000, and XP (Vista coming soon), Mac OS X 10.2 and greater. Without a serial number the Windows and Mac versions of Plopp run in demo mode so you can give painting with Plopp a try. With one purchased serial number you can run as many themes as you like as full version!
Plopp Classic is also available for Ubuntu Linux for free! Try it! (And send me comments, please.)
Check out the tutorial videos, the wiideos, and
cool Plopp paintings! -
Croquet SDK 1.0 released
The Croquet Consortium has released version 1.0 of Croquet, the 3-D virtual environment based on Squeak.
Nonprofit ‘Croquet Consortium’ Releases Open-Source Software Toolkit to Promote Collaborative 3-D Virtual EnvironmentsDURHAM, N.C. – March 27, 2007 – A nonprofit consortium of academic and corporate partners today announced the release of a free software toolkit for developers to use in creating 3-D “virtual environments.”
“We’re seeking to enable the creation of a rich series of interconnected ‘Croquet worlds’ where people can engage in productive collaborative interactions in support of learning and commerce – worlds that can be created, maintained and continually modified without the constraints of proprietary computer code,” said Julian Lombardi, assistant vice president of Duke’s Office of Information Technology.
The Croquet Consortium’s new “3-D Virtual Environments Software Developer’s Kit” (Croquet SDK 1.0) will promote collaboration among far-flung research teams working on everything from cancer cells to hurricanes, as well as active learning among students and their instructors. These networked 3-D teams from research, education and industry will be able to work together across a variety of computer platforms and devices, from laptops to cell phones.
“This will change the way people think about software and computation, from today’s device-oriented perspective to a perspective of computation as a persistent, pervasive service,” said Patrick Scaglia, vice president and chief technology officer of HP’s Imaging and Printing Group.
Croquet 3-D virtual environments can support live discussion among worldwide collaborators who come together in “real time” within a 3-D virtual space. They may view, manipulate and revise documents, dynamic visualizations or large amounts of data from sources such as laboratories or supercomputing centers.
Added Greg Nuyens, chief executive officer of Qwaq Inc., “we have found Croquet to be a compelling platform technology for developing very large scale, richly featured and interlinked virtual environments. With the release of the Croquet SDK, we are excited about the new possibilities for using Croquet in our products and see benefits for developers everywhere.”
For example, public health officials and epidemiologists across a country could use the Croquet environment to track the spread of an infectious disease by sharing a dynamically changing display of infection data. Similarly, architects and engineers could collaborate on a building design, or chemists and biologists could prototype different chemical compositions for a new drug.
The free kit provides developers with a flexible tool to create virtual spaces with built-in networked telephony and a “late-binding object-oriented” programming language that allows multiple users to jointly create, animate or modify 3-D objects and dynamic simulations. Developers can also import and share resources, such as 2-D web applications or multimedia content, from their own systems. Working together across multiple locations, they can change simulations while they are running and work together to create new applications – all in “real time.”
The kit can be downloaded from the consortium’s website, http://croquetconsortium.org.
The newly formed Croquet Consortium is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to developing and promoting the widespread adoption of open-source, Croquet technologies for research, education and industry. Its institutional supporters include Duke University, the University of Minnesota, HP, 3dSolve Inc. and Qwaq Inc. Croquet was initiated by Alan Kay – winner of the Kyoto Prize and the Turing and Draper awards – working in collaboration with David A. Smith, Andreas Raab, David P. Reed, Mark P. McCahill and Lombardi.
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Squeak – for a different Summer of Code!
Squeak!
Squeak is an open source dialect of Smalltalk, a pure OO programming language that takes objectorientation principles to their limits.
Development in Squeak will be quite different from what you may experience in Java, C#, Ruby or Python, yet it will be very fulfilling.
So, why not Squeak
for the Summer of Code?
Squeak
will offer you:
a
productive environment to develop your ideas
a great community – a first class mentoring program
appreciation and value for your workPossible
project areas include:
Virtual Machine – Compiler
User Interface – OS Integration
Development and End-user Tools
The Seaside Web Framework
and many more!
Squeak – for a different Summer of Code!
Contact us:
email soc@lists.squeakfoundation.org
web http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/SummerOfCode
IRC #squeak on Freenode.org -
Team reports – January 2007
Various team leaders has sent the monthly reports fro their team to the Squeak-dev mailing list:
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CIO Insight Interview with Alan Kay
CIO Insight magazine has published an interview with Smalltalk’s and Squeak’s father, Alan Kay. The interview, titled “Alan Kay: The PC Must Be Revamped—Now”, covers many topics such as the past, present and future of computing, Squeak and Croquet, the OLPC project and the other initiatives of ViewPoints Research Institute, and the need to reinvent the PC in order for computing to leap forward.
