Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Academy | Newsletter | Subscribe | Shop |
Departments

Partner Links
Make your own website
WinWeb OnlineOffice
Comparing prices of hardware is worth it.
Price Comparison
What:
Where:
Country:
vacatures Netherlands njobs Linux vacatures
arbeit Deutschland njobs Linux arbeit
work United Kingdom njobs Linux jobs
Lavoro Italia njobs Linux lavoro
Emploi France njobs Linux emploi
trabajo Espana njobs Linux trabajo

user friendly

Admin Magazine

ADMIN Network & Security

Subscribe now and save!

 ADMIN - Explore the new world of system administration! ADMIN is a smart, technical magazine for IT pros on heterogeneous networks. Each issue delivers technical solutions to the real-world problems you face every day. Learn the latest techniques for better:

  • network security
  • system management
  • troubleshooting
  • performance tuning
  • virtualization
  • cloud computing

 on Windows, Linux, Solaris, and popular varieties of Unix.

http://www.admin-magazine.com/

  linux-magazine.com » Issues » 2009 » 109 » Ask Klaus!  

Print this page. Recommend
Share

Adding Alice

Question:

Hello, I'm a teacher who would like to familiarize my students more with Alice (Randy Pausch's visual programming language), yet I can't reliably work with it at home. Any ideas on the best way to get Alice visual programming language to work in Linux? Thank you. Don Davis

Answer:

In general, look for software specifically for your operating system. After a short search, some Debian packages showed up for Alice. If you add the following line to your /etc/apt/sources.list file,

deb http://www.ps.uni-sb.de/alice/download/debian stable contrib

you should be able to install the (old) version 1.4 of the programming language's run-time environment with the following command:

sudo aptitude install alice-runtime

At least for Debian/Lenny (and Knoppix), this seems to work.

Under "Alice 3 beta" at the developer's website [3], you can also find a Linux "offline installer" for version 3 [4]. At 516MB, it is amazingly large, and I did not look inside. This beta installer is a self-extracting shell script that can be run by typing the following after download:

sh Alice3BetaInstaller-Complete-3.0.0.0.61-linux.sh

Alice is a 3D framework for Java with its own visual development platform – similar to Eclipse – so you probably only need to have Java and a few Java extensions (Beans) installed as a prerequisite. This is just a guess, though. If you try the beta, please let me know whether it worked. :-)

Note: Make sure you have the most recent stable JRE installed. The best compatibility is usually reached with Sun Microsystems Java [5].


Read full article as PDF »


Comments

Article link

Ben Weatherall Dec 14, 2009 4:00pm GMT

The actual link to the full article link (.pdf file) is http://www.linux-magazine.c...ssue/109/052-054_ask-klaus.pdf.

Print this page. Recommend
Share
Related Articles
What's Next? What to do after you install openSUSE
TECH TOOLS
Qt 4.6 and KDE 4.4 Test driving some new features of KDE 4.4
DVD Inlay: Mandriva Linux 2010.2 The latest release from Mandriva
LINUX MINT 6 DVD INLAY "FELICIA" UNIVERSAL VERSION
Community Notebook Cache
Wherever you go...

...Linux Magazine goes with you!

Check out the advantages of a Digital Subscription:

  • Access articles by downloading PDFs,
  • find the Linux solutions you need with an easy keyword search,
  • maintain your own paperless archive...

more...