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posted by CoolHand on Sunday August 30 2015, @09:05AM   Printer-friendly
from the mmmmmm-pie dept.

Kids don't want to code. They want to solve problems us oldies can't perceive
...
When the Raspberry Pi shipped to a planet excited geeks in the middle of 2012, it changed the way we taught IT. That had always been the intention of creator Eben Upton. Give the kids the goods and they'll do the rest.

At first, it seemed as though the grownups were more excited than the kids, creating all sorts of wacky Pi-based projects. Fortunately, those grownups - eager for the respect of their peers - shared everything they learned, posting to blogs, StackOverflow, and thousands of other websites. Want to know how to blink an LED? Drive a motor? Read a sensor? Set up a web server? Within the first year, all of that was out there, all of it indexed, searchable, and useful to kids.
...
these kids are using sensors on a Raspberry Pi to read the air quality of the room, alerting asthmatics to seek an environment less likely to give them breathing problems. Over there - because sometimes the referees miss goals - a netball-crazed 11 year-old girl used an ultrasonic sensor and Raspberry Pi to create an automatic scoring system.

Consider three ten year-olds who fussed and fiddled with LittleBits - a mashup of Lego with the Internet of Things - until they found just the right combination of pieces to create a system that allows you to know whether that sushi tray gliding by on that continuous track has been sitting around a little too long to be safe to eat. (Their inspiration was a teacher who'd gotten sick from bad sushi.)

The examples of kids' projects in the article aren't particularly strong. Have Soylentils seen kids doing particularly cool things with RPi's or Arduinos?


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  • (Score: 1) by Pax on Sunday August 30 2015, @05:44PM

    by Pax (5056) on Sunday August 30 2015, @05:44PM (#229910)

    Yup. And, get this! The Raspberry Pi can't be initialized by anybody who doesn't have an HDMI TV

    erm.. wrong, just plain wrong.
    In fact you could not be more wrong if your name was W Wrongy Wrongenstein.
    What looks like a simple stereo output 3.5mm socket is actually an 3.5mm combo composite video with stereo audio.
    just like the ones that you used to get with the Nokia N900(yes i had one and they were great and awful all at the same time)
    So if you can't even get that right I don't care what the other bunch of shit was.