In message <E650188D967B43559462CA14B6BD19D4@d3hkh9x94>, Dilwyn Jones <dil...@evans1511.fsnet.co.uk> writes

Hi Dilwyn,

Yes, it is aimed at the education market - to exploit - like in the late 1970's and 1980's.

Hopefully, the young people today - in the 21st Century - will have a whole new set of ideas of what it can made do.

I did a lot of Projects with GCSE and 'A' Level students, in Education.

The BBC 'B' was the 'best' machine, as it had a built in User Port for external input/output control of devices.

Remember, at the time, Clive Sinclair lost out on the 'BBC Contract to Schools' to Chris Curry.


Norman Dunbar wrote:
The possibilities seem endless...
Bingo. This is what will make it a success (I sincerely hope) unless the "youth of today" are too far down the road of "everything on my phone for free" to be rescued from never having to do stuff for themselves.
I think it's aimed at least in part at the education market. Now, the new Quanta editor works in the education sector...I wonder if he could set his students a project to create a QL out of a RaspberryPi ...

(ducks before a Raspberry flies in his direction)

(Who's an old git then?)
No comment...
;-)

--
Malcolm Cadman
_______________________________________________
QL-Users Mailing List
http://www.q-v-d.demon.co.uk/smsqe.htm

Reply via email to