michael@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
On Sat, 9 Dec 2006, Brad Fuller wrote:
carmen wrote:
On Sat Dec 09, 2006 at 11:21:40AM +0100, Bengt G�rd�n wrote:
> Hi,
> > One of my colleges asked me about Linux audio software suitable
for > children. I must admit that I never thought of that. Although
I have > children of my own. My children play with our small studio
and if theres > a problem I'm there anyway. But my college needs
software that is more > geared towards ease of use and in his case
towards children (not that > fluent in English) in the age of 6-7
years. So if you have any > suggestion it would be appreciated.
git clone git://dev.laptop.org/projects/tamtam
Tamtam is a good one to look at and the OLPC is a good reference.
Here's the OLPC Wiki link:
http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Tamtam
and the repo:
http://dev.laptop.org/git.do?p=projects/tamtam;a=tree
I'm very interested in this topic as well, both for children and adults
with a
children's level of understanding (me). Tamtam seems wonderful, but as
near as
I could tell, it's still under development. Does anyone know if it, or a
similar
program, exists now?
I couldn't understand the reference to "git". Is "git" the parent of
tamtam? I
could find no reference to git on the web or rather, I found countless
references to the word "git" that had nothing to do with music :-)
git is a version control system that, apparently, the OLPC developers
decided to use. I say "apparently" because etoys uses it too - although
there is an yum repo too for etoys. Which, BTW is on the OLPC wiki site
and allows you to quickly check out etoys.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Git_(software)
Thanks,
ichael
--
brad fuller
http://www.Sonaural.com/
+1 (408) 799-6124