Childhood Computing

(susam.net)

22 points | by blenderob 1 hour ago

7 comments

  • cube00 2 minutes ago
    I never understood why Microsoft didn't have free or cheap licences to encourage kids to program.

    The school computer lab had Visual Basic but you only got an hour week in there as part of the computing subject, the school library computers couldn't have it because the licence was per seat not per site.

    You really only had QBASIC which was great but we really wanted to write Windows apps. You'd be up for thousands of dollars annually for an MSDN subscription just to get Visual Basic.

  • pixel_popping 34 minutes ago
    I'll always remember that moment on RPG maker (probably around 9 years old) where suddenly I've understood Variables (I was experienced with HTML and so-on prior), a whole world was unlocked, VB6 programs became possible, everything "clicked" suddenly. I feel once you understand the fundamentals on how it works, it's easy to progress very fast as a child/teenager afterward.

    With my kid I want to ensure that fundamentals of computing are understood as early as possible, this is what allows you to understand how the world is interconnected.

  • jeremyjh 43 minutes ago
    I had many similar experiences, but almost a decade earlier. At grade school we had Apple 2s with Logo, Oregon Trail and other education classics. My junior high was a small parochial school that still had TRS-80s in 1988, along with some apples. My freshman year of high school was in a well funded district in Chicago suburbs. They had Macs with Excel and Word - we wrote lab reports in science classes with our data input and graphed in excel and the graphs pasted into the word doc reports - in 1990.
  • raghavchamadiya 49 minutes ago
    That smell thing is so real. I still get hit with it randomly and I'm immediately 10 years old again
  • king_geedorah 48 minutes ago
    It's striking how concise the program in the first video is. Also I had no idea "Digger" existed. I've only ever known Dig Dug in that style.
  • kj4211cash 47 minutes ago
    Love this! You've inspired me to write my own blog post about my early days with an Amiga (1000?). I wonder how many of us have similar experiences.
  • sonnyproto 31 minutes ago
    Good old time :)