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Starting with BASIC didn't do hundreds of 80s kids any harm.
I, myself, have gone on to learn VB, Pascal, PHP, C/C++ as well as a few smaller niche languages.
Edited 2009-04-01 09:46 UTC
I, myself, have gone on to learn VB, Pascal, PHP, C/C++ as well as a few smaller niche languages.
Well, that could be the brain damage in question. :-)
VB = Visual Beginners all-purpose symbolic instruction code.
This surely convices you that I'm quite old, but BASIC was my first programming language, too (on a robotron KC 87). I'm glad that my days of BASIC and Pascal are over, allthough I sometimes practice GOTO KNEIPE : INPUT BIER. :-)
To be fair, VB has grown it's roots in BASIC. In fact it's a whole new language in it's own right. And one that's actually pretty good for knocking up quick GUI interfaces to otherwise manual processes or building MSOffice macros.
Sure, it's not nearly as powerful as C++ and platform-tied unlike Java, but it's just another tool that's available for the right jobs.
BBC Basic for me. I miss those machines
Psh, those "professors" are not in touch with reality. As limited as basic is, it's still a good introduction for the curious child, where languages like C, C++, and Python might overwhelm them at that point. The very nice thing about basic, for this purpose, is its completely interpreted nature, you can run the program and monitor exactly which lines get executed, and look at said lines, all without having to learn a debugger. I'd say it's actually a very good introduction to programming for the youngsters, considering you learn some basic programming principles coupled with some basic debugging techniques. Basic itself is of limited practical use, but the principles are the same and it makes an excellent introduction.
That's more like it. I was a kid when I learned BASIC - If I was learning C when I was ten then pointers would have made me pick up a skateboard and say 'fcuk computers d00d' for a solid ten years. But in BASIC I could poke a value into an address and peek it out in a whole different part of the program. Years later I found out what I had done. I sort of wish I still had those tapes.
Now I am not suggesting anyone learn basic as an adult (or use a computer that has less RAM than any modern chip has for cache) but for 1983 it was the bomb
These boxes will be someones first computer too
Not to mention you can give one of these to your kids in those in-between years between (1) being smart enough to use a computer, and (2) being mature enough to use a computer wisely.
(The years between 1 and 2 will vary by child.)
Forgot to include a link to the wonderful Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOS_Technology_6502
Jeff
I mean, it sounds novel and all, it's nice it's in production, but, seriously, why not just buy a used Commodore 64 or Atari off of Ebay, get some more peripherals, access to VAST amounts of information, and programs, etc.
Yea, you can't play Nintendo games...but, the C64 and Ataris were some seriously fine computers and I think would be a better option for someone wanted to go down that path than one of these.
It seems to have gone unmentioned that sales of this product will benefit a worthy cause:
http://playpower.org/





