Project talk:Classroom HackSpaceChallenge: Difference between revisions

From London Hackspace Wiki
(Created page with " == Ideas == *Do you mean lego? I think something between Lego mindstorms and PICAXE/Arduino, as I know at my school (and the Young hackspace kids) love to get the mindstorms out...")
 
Line 5: Line 5:
* I meant [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo_%28programming_language%29 logo], kids today :P. Modularness would be cool. If we had a working makerbot  we could make bricks that are lego compatible(maybe not the hackspaces?). Or could we do something with the laser cutter, hmm.
* I meant [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo_%28programming_language%29 logo], kids today :P. Modularness would be cool. If we had a working makerbot  we could make bricks that are lego compatible(maybe not the hackspaces?). Or could we do something with the laser cutter, hmm.


*The makerbot would seem the obvious way - but we wouldn't need to make many pieces as schools may already have lego - I was just thinking making a different sort of 'brain'.
*The makerbot would seem the obvious way - but we wouldn't need to make many pieces as schools may already have lego - I was just thinking making a different sort of 'brain', where they can learn more about EE, (making it better than NXC) as well as a kid friendly language. So there is more guidance than with arduino, but its more open than Lego, and is hackable if you know what you are doing.

Revision as of 16:32, 6 March 2011

Ideas

  • Do you mean lego? I think something between Lego mindstorms and PICAXE/Arduino, as I know at my school (and the Young hackspace kids) love to get the mindstorms out - but the PICAXE programming overwhelms them slightly (maybe due to bad teaching?), so school doesn't use them a lot. Maybe making it inter-operable with lego pieces? I know there is a guy at the hackspace trying to reverse engineer them, and the modular-ness is great. (MonkeyJam)
  • I meant logo, kids today :P. Modularness would be cool. If we had a working makerbot we could make bricks that are lego compatible(maybe not the hackspaces?). Or could we do something with the laser cutter, hmm.
  • The makerbot would seem the obvious way - but we wouldn't need to make many pieces as schools may already have lego - I was just thinking making a different sort of 'brain', where they can learn more about EE, (making it better than NXC) as well as a kid friendly language. So there is more guidance than with arduino, but its more open than Lego, and is hackable if you know what you are doing.