SqueakFest ’07 – Register Now!
30 June, 2007
From Kim Rose, Viewpoints Research Institute:
Greetings —
Online registration is now available for SqueakFest ’07!
http://imamp.colum.edu/eceim/squeakfest07/index.php
We’re putting together a great three day program including hands-on workshops, panels, presentations, casual sharing time and fun social events.
Alan Kay will give a talk about the One Laptop Per Child Initiative, the “xo” machine and Squeak Etoys on this platform.
Registration for the entire program is $125.00. Please register
early as this will be helpful for our planning. We also encourage
you to BOOK YOUR HOTEL ROOM(s) EARLY! Chicago will host numerous summer events and hotels are already near capacity for August 1-3.
Some suggested accomodations appear on the SqueakFest website:
http://imamp.colum.edu/eceim/squeakfest07/accommodations.php
Please forward this email to anyone you know that may be interested in attending.
Come join us in Chicago! We look forward to seeing you there.
cheers,
Kim
If you can’t take the HEAT!
25 June, 2007
You know what they say, “If you can’t take the heat, get out of the laptop for the worlds children business!” Pictured above is the OLPC computer running day and night (look closely and notice the Squeak E-Toys running) at scorching temperatures 52C (125F) during the day time and 22C (72F) at night. Just image running your computer laptop in an oven all day!
Sophie-Croquet?
29 May, 2007
Squeak in North Carolina Schools
23 May, 2007
The University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW) has published the following press release:
Wilmington, N.C. – While demand for Information Technology (IT) professionals is projected to increase over the next five years, a dwindling number of American students are choosing to specialize in IT fields. Now, a grant-funded partnership between the University of North Carolina Wilmington and the New Hanover, Pender and Brunswick County schools is addressing that issue by infusing IT skills into the curriculum in grades 7-12.
[…]
The three-year-long project will work directly with about 75 educators who teach the Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics (STEM) curricula and 150 of their students in grades 7-12. Teachers and students will learn to use “Squeak” software to create virtual models that simulate actual science and math-related experiments. For example, students could create a computer model to study the transmission of a disease, an activity that could be too dangerous to study in a physical laboratory.
“It may be difficult to study the spread of a virus for real in middle school,” said Gene Tagliarini, associate professor of computer science and grant coordinator. “But you can simulate an epidemic using the Squeak tool, which can create models to study things as abstract as balancing equations or as concrete as building a bridge.”
[…]
You can read the complete press release on the UNCW website.
Kabluee
16 May, 2007
Scratch Unleashes New Projects Web Site
15 May, 2007
Creating from Scratch
New Software from MIT Media Lab
Unleashes Kids’ Creativity Online
A new programming language developed at the MIT Media Lab turns kids from media consumers into media producers, enabling them to create their own interactive stories, games, music, and animation for the Web.
With this new software, called Scratch, kids can program interactive creations by simply snapping together graphical blocks, much like LEGO® bricks, without any of the obscure punctuation and syntax of traditional programming languages. Kids can then share their interactive stories and games on the Web, the same way they share videos on YouTube, engaging with other kids in an online community that provides inspiration and feedback.
“Until now, only expert programmers could make interactive creations for the Web. Scratch opens the gates for everyone,” says Mitchel Resnick, Professor of Learning Research at the MIT Media Lab and head of the Scratch development team.
Resnick’s Lifelong Kindergarten research group previously developed the “programmable bricks” that inspired the award-winning LEGO® MINDSTORMS® robotics kits. Just as MINDSTORMS allows kids to control LEGO creations in the physical world, Scratch allows them to control media-rich creations on the Web.
“As kids work on Scratch projects, they learn to think creatively and solve problems systematically – skills that are critical to success in the 21st century,” says Resnick.
Designed for ages 8 and up, Scratch is available by free download from the Scratch website (http://scratch.mit.edu). The software runs on both PCs and Macs. The MIT Media Lab is now collaborating with other organizations – including Intel, Microsoft, Samsung, BT, the LEGO Group, Motorola, and One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) – to create other versions and applications of Scratch, including versions for mobile phones.
The name Scratch comes from the technique used by hip-hop disc jockeys, who spin vinyl records to mix music clips together in creative ways. Similarly, Scratch lets kids mix together a wide variety of media: graphics, photos, music, and sounds.
A glance at the Scratch website (http://scratch.mit.edu) reveals a kaleidoscope of projects created by kids: a story about a polar bear school, space attack games, and a break-dancing performance. Some creations are goofy and fun; some reveal serious social themes. Kids are constantly modifying and extending one another’s projects on the website – and learning from one another in the process. “It’s exciting to wake up each morning and see what’s new on the site,” said Resnick.
Scratch was developed by Resnick’s Lifelong Kindergarten research group in collaboration with UCLA educational researchers, with financial support from the National Science Foundation and the Intel Foundation. Throughout the development process, the design team received feedback from children and teens at Intel Computer Clubhouses and school classrooms.
“There is a buzz in the room when the kids get going on Scratch projects,” says Karen Randall, a teacher at the Expo Elementary School in St. Paul, Minnesota. “Students set design goals for their projects and problem-solve to fix program bugs. They collaborate, cooperate, co-teach. They appreciate the power that Scratch gives them to create their own versions of games and animations.”
For more information, see http://scratch.mit.edu/about
The Lifelong Kindergarten group (http://llk.media.mit.edu) at the MIT Media Lab develops new technologies that, in the spirit of the blocks and finger paint of kindergarten, expand the range of what people can design, create, and learn.
©2007 MIT Media Laboratory
LEGO and MINDSTORMS are trademarks of the LEGO Group.
Used here with special permission. ©2007 The LEGO Group.
|
The development of Scratch was supported by the National Science Foundation under grant number 0325828. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this release are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. |
Don’t Miss Smalltalk Solutions – April 30th – May 2nd 2007
28 April, 2007
Smalltalk Solutions is this weekend! There will be a number of talks on Seaside. Check out the presentation listing in DabbleDB (which is written using Seaside). Gemstone will be talking about their work porting Seaside and Monticello to Gemstone and are announcing a free version of Gemstone.
Carl Gundel announced a Seaside Birds of Feather Session Wednesday May 2nd from 5 to 7pm.
Don’t miss Boris Popov’s Seaside Experience Report. Boris and DeepCove Labs have done some really excellent work! Check it out.
Don’t Miss Bert Freudenberg’s Keynote presentation about OLPC! The One Laptop Per Child initiative is a wonderful way for all smalltalkers to get involved and contribute to something that is really worthwhile!
Google Summer Of Code – Squeak’n style
16 April, 2007
Thanks to a lot of very hard work by Giovanni Corriga all the mentors and applicants, Squeak was selected for five projects in the Google Summer of Code. Read the rest of this entry »
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.ca
Squeak Press Room reference: http://www.squeak.org/PressRoom/SqueakAt2007SmalltalkSolutionsConference/
From the Press Room: Squeak Badge Fund Raiser Campaign
6 April, 2007
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.org
Squeak Press Room reference: http://www.squeak.org/PressRoom/SqueakBadgeFundRaiserCampaign/