On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 3:54 PM, Tim McNamara <[email protected]> wrote: > I think it's highly inappropriate to say that eating your own dogfood means > that software developers, or even teachers, should use Sugar. Sugar is an
I (personally) view this as an important part of Sugar's scalability goals. "Low floors, high ceilings." It seems that you and I are just debating where exactly the ceiling lies. I find it personally objectionable to suggest a kid in Peru use software which I'm not willing to use myself. For my part, the promise of "View Source" -- and of Pippy patches I wrote and the TurtleScript project I'm current hacking on -- was that there be no artificial barriers between "developers" and "kids". But that's just my perspective. Clearly opinions differ. Since we're just evaluating a (vague) goal statement, not deciding some dogmatic principle, for the moment I'm just suggesting that we more precisely evaluate the "dogfood" goal by describing concretely how far we've managed to raise the ceiling. Who can use Sugar now on a daily basis who couldn't last year? Making the answers more precise than "I think we're doing well here" will help us better evaluate our progress towards our goal, and suggest strategies to continue its approach. (Or even to debate exactly where the goalpost is, if it's felt we've gone too far.) --scott -- ( http://cscott.net/ ) _______________________________________________ IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!) [email protected] http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep
