Hello all,
I find this type of initiative very interesting, I'd like to have some similar educational project when I was in school.
I think the software approach commented by Jonas could be more affordable, in terms of management, and more cheap too. Said that, the idea of a kit to hack is really attractive. Perhaps it could be interesting to propose it as course in schools or online (like on Coursera or a similar site).
Best regards,
On 11/25/2016 02:53 PM, Jonas Forsslund wrote:
Hi, Matthias,
In general I like these kinds of ideas. The whole Raspberry Pi concept is well developed. What I have been thinking recently however, is that there is perhaps an overfocus on hardware. Imagine instead a virtual small computer easily accessed and programmed from a within a web browser. It could visualize the memory, step-by-step debugging could be very straight-forward etc. I would even use it myself to "once and for all" understand some cs concepts i'm still unsure about or know in theory but have not "seen". Maybe such projects are available but I am not aware of any (please tell if you do know). A similar but more advanced projects is the nand2tetris.org http://nand2tetris.org course that I would like to persue at some point.
Some obvious benefits of a software solution include no distribution issue, environmental concerns, upgrades and not to mention zero duplication costs.
With this said, if having your own small hardware computer gets the kids going, that should of course be great to support for fsfe I think.
Best regads Jonas Forsslund Sweden
2016-11-25 14:32 GMT+01:00 Matthias Kirschner <mk@fsfe.org mailto:mk@fsfe.org>:
I'd like to get some feedback about some ideas floating around my head at the moment, and thought that some of you might be able to help here. I was talking with some people who would like to fund some concrete Free Software activities, focusing on research and education. One idea which came up is to support pupils to learn more about how computer work, and promote hacking by providing "science packs" with small hackable computers, and some modules, sensors etc. What do you think about making it easier for pupils to get access to such tools. E.g. by having some packs in the libraries or for school projects? I would be interested what you think about that, as I am not yet sure about it. If you like it, do you have an idea how you could make sure that children who are interested in that are connected around Europe? (E.g. in Germany there is something called "Jugend hackt" -- youth is hacking -- Is there something similar on a EU level? Or are there other ideas?) Thanks for your feedback, Matthias -- Matthias Kirschner - President - Free Software Foundation Europe Schönhauser Allee 6/7, 10119 Berlin, Germany | t +49-30-27595290 <tel:%2B49-30-27595290> Registered at Amtsgericht Hamburg, VR 17030 | (fsfe.org/join <http://fsfe.org/join>) Contact (fsfe.org/about/kirschner <http://fsfe.org/about/kirschner>) - Weblog (k7r.eu/blog.html <http://k7r.eu/blog.html>) _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list Discussion@lists.fsfe.org <mailto:Discussion@lists.fsfe.org> https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion <https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion>
Discussion mailing list Discussion@lists.fsfe.org https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion