BBC Micro Bit Mini-Computer To Expand Internationally With New Hardware
The Micro Bit mini-computer is to be sold across the world
and enthusiasts are to be offered blueprints showing how to build their
own versions. The announcements were made by a new non-profit
foundation that is taking over the educational project, formerly led by
the BBC. About one million of the devices were given away free to
UK-based schoolchildren earlier this year. Beyond the UK, Micro Bits are
also in use in schools across the Netherlands and Iceland. But the
foundation now intended to co-ordinate a wider rollout. "Our goal is to
go out and reach 100 million people with Micro Bit, and by reach I mean
affect their lives with the technology," said the foundations' new chief
executive Zach Shelby. "That means [selling] tens of millions of
devices... over the next five to 10 years." His organization plans to
ensure Micro Bits can be bought across Europe before the end of the year
and is developing Norwegian and Dutch-language versions of its coding
web tools to boost demand. Next, in 2017, the foundation plans to target
North America and China, which will coincide with an upgrade to the
hardware.
TrixX adds: The
makers of the BBC micro:bit have announced that they are releasing the
full specs for the device under an open license, (SolderPad License,
similar to Apache License but for hardware). This means that anyone can
legally use the specs and build their own device, or fork the reference design GitHub repo and design their derivatives.
BBC Micro Bit Mini-Computer To Expand Internationally With New Hardware
Reviewed by mosjoe
on
01:44:00
Rating:
No comments: