OLPC Human Interface Guidelines/Activities/Introduction: Difference between revisions

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{{hig-subnav|prev_link=The Laptop Experience/Global Search|prev=Global Search|next_link=Activities/Activity Basics|next=Activity Basics}}
{{hig-subnav-inter|p_link=The Laptop Experience/Global Search|p_label=The Laptop Experience|c_section=Activities|c_page=Introduction|n_link=Activities/Activity Basics|n_label=Activity Basics}}



===A New Model===
===A New Model===
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{{hig-subnav|prev_link=The Laptop Experience/Global Search|prev=Global Search|next_link=Activities/Activity Basics|next=Activity Basics}}
{{hig-subnav-inter|p_link=The Laptop Experience/Global Search|p_label=The Laptop Experience|c_section=Activities|c_page=Introduction|n_link=Activities/Activity Basics|n_label=Activity Basics}}

Revision as of 19:58, 6 December 2006

A New Model

We make a distinction between the typical single-application, multi-document model of computing and the OLPC full-screen activity interface, where each object (document) runs within its own instance—multiple instances of a given activity may run in parallel. Activity instances within Sugar provide a way to handle files as objects; each instance may represent a different group of collaborating individuals, and creating a new instance of the Draw activity implicitly creates a new drawing. "Open" and "Save" actions are relegated to a journal interaction; In fact, we strengthen this by replacing the notion of "Saving" with the more general notion of "Keeping" things. To "open" a drawing you've kept, you simply resume it.