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The BBC planned to give away the computer free to every Year 7 (ages 11 and 12) child in Britain starting from October 2015 - around 1 million devices. [4] [20] In advance of the roll-out an online simulator was made available to help educators prepare and some teachers were to receive the device in September 2015. [3]
The biggest change was the computer which has been replaced with a Raspberry Pi. The Swiss Military Museum explained that sourcing components for the restoration made the process especially difficult.
Sonic Pi is a live coding environment based on Ruby, originally designed to support both computing and music lessons in schools, developed by Sam Aaron in the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory [1] in collaboration with Raspberry Pi Foundation.
Ultibo core is an embedded or bare metal development environment for Raspberry Pi. [8] Ultibo is based on Free Pascal and developed under a modified version of Lazarus. The IDE is PC based but has been ported to Linux and Mac as well.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation was created as a private company limited by guarantee in 2008, [8] and was registered as a charity in 2009 [9] by people at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory who had noticed a decline in the number and skills of young people applying for computer science courses.
Kano Computing is a London-based startup that specializes in computer hardware and software. Founded in January 2013, the company focuses on creating educational kits that utilize Raspberry Pi single-board computers to teach STEM subjects to children.
DietPi - a highly customisable, high-performance minimal distro for the Raspberry Pi and other ARM SBCs; EYRX - [273] ; real-time operating system by Eyring Corporation feren OS - A Windows and macOS replacement Linux distro based on Linux Mint (which is based on Ubuntu), featuring a theming engine capable of replicating the look of various ...
The development of MOOSE at Idaho National Laboratory (INL) since May 2008, has resulted in a unique approach to computational engineering that combines computer science with a strong underlying mathematical description in a unique way that allows scientists and engineers to develop engineering simulation tools in a fraction of the time previously required. [2]