Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 3rd Aug 2012 00:41 UTC, submitted by henderson101
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I don't know... I kinda doubt there will be that much of an impact with RPi. Yeah, maybe somewhat by the movement spurred (for whatever reason only when it got such toy...), its guides and such - but nothing really stopped programming stuff before RPi.
And here's the real kicker: not only it's more convenient to do this on a laptop, also a) it's more convenient even when some environment on this laptop simulates RPi b) is there anybody / any school that didn't have PCs already and got RPi? (so, most likely just adding fairly quickly to electronic junk, with most of them)
Edited 2012-08-11 00:05 UTC




Member since:
2006-01-23
The idea behind the Pi, is that people have a very cheap way to learn how to code, it's primary aim was for schools so kids had something to learn on/with. Geeks as you say, have already made a big headway and it will leave a lasting mark for other people wanting to learn how to code.
Of course, it doesn't always have to be linux that it runs and I'm sure there are some nice projects out there that don't run linux.