Sugar Labs offers ubiquitous access to Sugar in a USB (Universal Serial Bus) flash memory drive (stick). The Sugar on a Stick project gives children access to their Sugar on any computer in their environment with just a USB memory stick. The Sugar on a Stick Strawberry release is based on Fedora 11 with the latest updates as of June 22.

Taking advantage of the Fedora LiveUSB, it’s possible to store everything you need to run Sugar on a single USB memory stick (minimum size 1GB). This small USB device can boot into the Sugar learning platform on different computers at home, at school, or at an after-school program, bypassing the software on the those computers.
In fact, Sugar on a Stick will work even if the computer does not have a hard-drive. With Sugar on a Stick, the learning experience is the same on any computer: at school, at home, at the library, or an after-school center.
The Fedora version contains a compressed copy of Fedora 11 that will boot, run in memory, and maintain changes on a USB flash drive with a standard FAT16 or FAT32 partition. The files coexist with other files the user may have or put on the disk. Different types of configurations are being designed to offer the options to run virtualizations or emulations and to use virtual machines on existing computers, saving the Sugar Home folder (the learner’s work) on the Stick for use at another workstation.
For getting Sugar on a Stick you’ll need a USB Flash drive (at least 1 GB capacity) to install space for saving your work and changes to the system.
You can also burn the ISO image to CD and then boot it like a LiveCD, but no work or changes will be saved after shutdown.)
Btw, you can create your Sugar Stick by follow the direction at Here, and download Sugar image at Here, and tutorial about how to use Sugar can be found at Here.


