This is great news!

The post is here:
http://scratch.mit.edu/forums/viewtopic.php?id=111325
MIT Scratch is actually a great example of this – it's built on top of the Squeak Smalltalk VM, and because this has generally only been run in anger on modern desktop hardware there hasn't previously been a case for heavy optimisation of its graphics routines, so it's a little sluggish on the Pi right now. We've commissioned a couple of pieces of work, the first of which involves porting it to use Pixman as its rendering backend, and the second involves optimising Pixman itself for the Pi's ARMv6 architecture (which will obviously pay dividends elsewhere in the system too).
Yes, the Foundation has been funding some improvements to Scratch - we should see some definite gains. As Eben said somewhere, Scratch isn't particular efficiently coded as it's never had to be, so there is great scope for improvement.simplesi wrote:Scratch 2.0 beta is just an online version which is flash based so never going to run on the Pi.
Great news to hear that someone is going to actively work on fixing/improving Scratch 1.4 on the RPi
Simon
Yes, Scratch 2.0 won't run on the RPI. The "offline" version will be an AIR app with the same source behind it...simplesi wrote:Scratch 2.0 beta is just an online version which is flash based so never going to run on the Pi.
Great news to hear that someone is going to actively work on fixing/improving Scratch 1.4 on the RPi
Simon