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The
BBC has revealed the final design of the Micro Bit, a pocket-sized
computer set to be given to about one million UK-based children in
October.
The device - which features a programmable array of red
LED lights - includes two buttons and a built-in motion sensor that were
not included in a prototype shown off in March.But another change means the product no longer has a slot for a thin battery.
That may compromise its appeal as a wearable device.
An add-on power pack, fitted with AA batteries, will be needed to use it as a standalone product.
The BBC's director general Tony Hall said the device should help tackle the fact children were leaving school knowing how to use computers but not how to program them.
"We all know there's a critical and growing digital skills gap in this country and that's why it's so important that we come together and do something about it," he said at a launch event in London.
Flashing lights
Children
will be encouraged to write simple code for the Micro Bit via a new
website, which will be accessible on both PCs and mobile devices.
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They
will be able to save and test their programs on the site before
transferring them to the tiny computer via a USB cable or wireless
Bluetooth connection.
The Micro Bit can then be made to interact
with its built-in sensors and buttons to make its 25 LEDs flash in
different patterns, letting it display - for example - letters and
numbers.
In addition, it can be connected to other computing kit
via its input-output rings - including the Raspberry Pi, Arduino and
Galileo - to carry out more complex tasks.
- the Micro Bit's built-in magnetometer sensor could be used to help create a metal detector
- its accelerometer to make a hi-tech spirit level
- its Bluetooth chip to control a DVD player
- its two buttons to create a video games controller
The BBC describes the 4cm by 5cm (1.6in by 2in) device and an
associated Make It Digital campaign as its "most ambitious education
initiative" since the release of the BBC Microcomputer System in the
1980s.
BBC Learning head Sinead Rocks said: "The BBC Micro Bit is all about young people learning to express themselves digitally.
"As
the Micro Bit is able to connect to everything from mobile phones to
plant pots and Raspberry Pis, this could be for the internet-of-things
what the BBC Micro was to the British gaming industry."
However,
one of the revisions has involved replacing a watch-battery slot with a
bulkier battery pack, which may make that less practical.
A
spokesman said: "The initial prototype utilised a smaller battery,
however in reviewing the design and examining the health and safety
implications of using small batteries for a young audience, where
siblings may be able to access the device, the partnership took the
decision to re-engineer this element.
"Each BBC Micro Bit will now use a discrete battery pack, which can be removed from the device."
Sales plan
While
the BBC instigated the project, other organisations - including the
chip designer ARM, Barclays Bank, Samsung, Microsoft and Lancaster
University - are also providing expertise and funds to bring the scheme
to fruition.
In addition, the Wellcome Trust, ScienceScope and
others will help prepare school teachers for the rollout, while
volunteer-led groups, including Coderdojo and Code Club, have also
promised support.
Although supplies will initially be limited to
the schoolchildren qualifying for a free Micro Bit in late October, the
BBC has confirmed that the computers will go on sale to others in the UK
and overseas before the end of the year.
It also intends to make the machine's specifications open source.
"When kids learn to code, they learn new ways of expressing themselves and organising their ideas.
"These skills are important for everyone, not just those who plan to pursue computing careers."
BBC Micro v BBC Micro Bit
But in many other ways the new device has its
advantages, not least because you do not need to plug it into a TV to
see what it is doing and it is many times cheaper to manufacture.
The broadcaster has highlighted three other advances:
- The Micro Bit is 18 times faster than its predecessor at running code
- It is 70 times smaller
- It is 617 times lighter
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