Read more.The 'Micro Bit' devices are Raspberry Pi-style mini system board computers.
Read more.The 'Micro Bit' devices are Raspberry Pi-style mini system board computers.
I wonder what the MCU is - it looks like an Atmel of some sort, presumably with an ARM inside given their involvement - except they don't have a 44-pin product AFAICT.
I wish I had this in secondary school rather than learning how to do a bloody mail merge in Word.
Didn't the BBC spend the last few years pleading poverty?
There's a line in the sand, and that post crossed it. Keep it family friendly please.
Last edited by dave87; 14-03-2015 at 10:37 AM.
In the 70s/80s the BBC gave children Jimmy Saville, now they get free computers.
How the world has changed.
This isn't a first for the BBC, a few people here will remember the BBC micro from the 1980s. It was based on the 6502 processor, and sold over 1.5 million units.
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We had the BBC Micro in our school, then came the Archimedes but the Micro was great, using the LOGO turtle, ah memories
Jon
I concur, I am sat writing this comment in the library at my school. Don't believe their bull****. They show us all working on iPad and Raspberry Pi's (Not that I would want to work on an iPad) and it's all propaganda. We don't get what they show on the news, that's a one time thing just for the video. The Computer Science department at my school which I study in has a room full of Pi's but we can't use them because we don't have HDMI monitors. I have heard from my CS teacher Year 7s are now learning to code, they're using "Kodu Game Lab" and "Scratch". We spend the first year learning Python and this helped us. Giving them a tiny PC that is powered on a cut down version of Debian is not going to help them learn to code they have no interest in coding. It'll go in the bin or in a box and they'll never use it again. If they want to get kids into programming they need to give these things to Computer Science students who have proved their interest in the subject, not just chucking them out with the hope one might land in the palm of a revolutionary programmer.
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