Sugar Labs
Community-run software project
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sugar Labs is a community-run software project whose mission is to produce, distribute, and support the use of Sugar, an open source desktop environment and learning platform.[2][3][4] Sugar Labs was initially established as a member project of the Software Freedom Conservancy, an umbrella organization for free software projects,[5] but in 2021, it became an independent 501(c)(3) organization.[6]
| Formation | May 15, 2008[1] |
|---|---|
| Type | NGO and Non profit organization |
| Purpose | Educational |
| Headquarters | Boston, Massachusetts, USA |
Region served | Worldwide |
| Membership | Contributors approved via community consensus |
President | Walter Bender |
| Staff | 0 |
| Volunteers | 100+ |
| Website | www |
About every six months, the Sugar Labs community releases a new version of the Sugar software. The most recent stable release is available as a Fedora Linux spin.[7] Through on-going support from Nexcopy's RecycleUSB program, Sugar Labs provides Sugar on a Stick to elementary schools.
The Sugar Labs community participates in events for teachers, students, and software developers interested in the Sugar software, such as the Montevideo Youth Summit[8] and Turtle Art Day.[9]
Sugar Labs has participated in Google Code-in,[10] which served as an outlet for young programmers. Sugar Labs is a long-time participant in Google Summer of Code.