Linked by Howard Fosdick on Sat 24th Nov 2012 17:52 UTC
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Member since:
2010-01-21
The whole point of the RPi is to bring back the days when students came into university Computer Science programs primed with deep knowledge of the system.
That means four sub-goals:
1. Convince parents it's safe to let the kid tinker like mad (tricky with a VM)
2. Let the kid explore as deeply as they want (tricky to give the feeling of with a VM)
3. Give the kids something to interact with the real world in fun ways like the GPIO header on old Commodore and BBC Micro computers. (impossible with a VM)
4. Convince schools to have a ready supply of them. (Easier when you satisfy the first three goals and offer it cheaper than the machines to run VMs on)
Not to mention that you always feel happier about something when it's your own personal thing rather than something to share with your parents, brothers, and sisters.
The RPi's price point also gives schools the option to say "Give us $35 and you can take it home to play around with and keep it when the semester is over." (Plus whatever the SD cards cost in bulk, of course)
I remember hearing Eben analogize it to giving the kid a bike rather than letting them muck around with the family car.
Edited 2012-11-28 10:44 UTC