This is silly. The real way to teach kids to program is to stick an old school home computer in front of them with a BASIC ROM, like a Spectrum or Commodore.
10 PRINT "I am a programmer now!"
20 GO TO 10
Also anyone who calls it "coding" instead of "programming" probably uses global variables for everything and can't even optimize a switch statement.
@TheforestofReinstateMonica As someone with actual experience teaching children programming, you need to spark the interest first, before you can go into actual programming.
As a kid, I probably would have never gotten interested in real programming without the toys I had when I was really young, the programmable toy truck and the Lego Mindstorms set.
@SonictheCuriouserHedgehog That was pretty much my veiled point. The kids who don't have it in them will be bored, and those with programming in their blood will love it.
The interest gets sparked because you want to be able to play games, and to do that, you need to know at least a very trivial amount of BASIC.
@TheforestofReinstateMonica Point is, I'd have never realized it was in my blood had it not been for those toys.
It was right after Lego Mindstorms that I asked for something more...technical, and at that point my parents got me my first "true" robot set (i.e. not a kid's toy)
I taught my daughter programming just by saying "hey, let's teach you how to use computers", essentially, so I suppose there are many ways to do it, but pushing it on kids by giving them crappy apps that teach really poor skills is counterproductive.
"Here's an assembler and a book on the x86 ISA. Go make something." and "Hey let's play with drawings and flashy blocks like the c0derz do!" are not the only two possibilities.
At age 6 I had my first exposure, with a little toy truck that had four "routine" blocks you could position on it to make it perform specific things (move forward, turn, dump contents out, etc.). I wasn't about to count it, but considering most "learn to program for kids" tools today are just like that, I'd count it.
You know, one thing that I keep wondering is why there isn't more emphasis on teaching kids other computer-related skills, like system administration or even basic information security.
Especially since those are very useful for protecting people against bad actors on the internet.
"Stranger danger" was nearly as useless as DARE, but what we really do need is scam/malware awareness. There's a reason so many kids have pwnt boxes.
@TheforestofReinstateMonica My parents put an emphasis on teaching us about viruses and malware. Most of what they knew was from the early 2000s when they tried to teach us, but still.
@ShadowWizardisVaccinating untill your pc is infected and frozen.
My Uni once send a test email when I attended. But instead of using an anonymous email they used their atandard IT email. They also had an IT-sec awareness week so it was all too obvious.
I returned them the email as an attachment and said to do better next time. They congratulated me for being one of the very few seeing through this.
@ShadowWizardisVaccinating Viruses and malware have many modes of operation or end goals. Some seem to do one thing but actually do a few things quite quickly while others seem to do nothing and remain invisible and undetected for decades. - You would always want to try to detect and remove, sometimes doing that triggers defensive mechanisms; and you need to go back far enough to find backups that aren't corrupted.
You can loose a lot in a fraction of a second. You can loose banking logins, have important data corrupted, family photos stolen in under an hour. --- It's like making backups, a waste of time until you need them; like insurance, safety ropes/belts/rails, planning before doing, etc.
@Rob the reason here comes from the top: our leaders don't give a tiny bit of personal example, and keep throwing parties even during lockdown, with dozens of people and without a single face mask. Not to mention never going into personal quarantine after being exposed to verified COVID patients because "their job is too important and they can't do it from home".
So people see this, and do the same. Can't blame them a bit.
@Luuklag true! So the feeling of false safety just add to the disobey orgy, or whatever we can call it.
(only few got the second dose of the vaccine, which is critical. about 20% of the COVID patients in hospitals did get the first dose and got infected afterwards.)
@Rob well, that's like giving a lecture about protecting your PC from viruses, while opening attached file in email sent with title "OPEN THIS TO WIN $1000000".
@Luuklag no, it's biscuit crumbles. She didn't break it well. ;)
@Luuklag Communication was just horrible on both ends. My mom's employer sent out the same letter to all personnel, even though they're supposed to be in several different groups. At the top was a big phone number you could call to make an appointment for vaccinating. Only after that there was the explanation that it was only for people within certain functions, and that the rest would get a letter again at a later stage...
Two of her coworkers called and just got appointments without anything being checked, really.
Not even a few questions where you'd at least have to lie...
The Hebrew Scout Movement in Israel (Hebrew: תנועת הצופים העבריים בישראל, Tnoat HaTzofim HaIvriiem BeYisrael) is an Israeli Jewish co-ed Scouting and Guiding association with about 80,000 members. The Hebrew Scout Movement is now the largest youth movement in IsraelIt is a member of the Israel Boy and Girl Scouts Federation, which is a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) and the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS).
Established in 1919, the Tzofim (Hebrew Scout Movement) was the first Zionist youth movement in Israel and remains today the largest...
Love how both of you jumped to that though XD Hadn't even crossed my mind yet
I am going to laugh so hard though if we get some severe cold weather and ideal conditions for an Elfstedentocht, and then can't have it because covid XD
@ShadowWizardisVaccinating suspended network-wide, since it appears they never posted anything worthwhile — left the profiles around, though, 'cause there's 32 of 'em and I don't see any harm in keepin' 'em around
Your call not to announce wouldn't have been too bad, if it would have took you 2 hours to reply, not 2 days. — Luuklag20 mins ago
@Luuklag is that really necessary? There might've been 1001 reasons they couldn't reply immediately (including considering further changes) and two days really isn't bad...
I was pondering on a response as well. Just delete it @Tinkeringbell it only attracts more users that might step up the complaints a bit. With shadows comment and mine all bases are covered.
It may just be some warning because drafts are stored somewhere that isn't "private company device"
@Ollie nope. All I know is just what regular users know, that images go to imgur so if you start drafting and upload an image, it's technically not private anymore. Very hard to randomly find, but not private
On my team the images go on a stackoverflow domain, not on imgur ....
@Tinkeringbell content goes in the Redis cache on SE server farm. I'm told even a dev would have a hard time finding it there. it doesn't have an easy access / query option.
I've been packing stuff up, preparing to move out to washington:
(Unofficial state motto: all the chipmunks you can eat)
Anyway, I was going through a closet and I found this:
Blew off the dust, and it was a vintage Stack Exchange messenger bag:
(A.K.A.: laptop purse)
So... I've been wondering what to do with it
And figured I'd ask y'all for advice
Some ideas: - Use it to replace the cookie can I use to hold odd bolts and screws - Run a contest on meta with the bag as a prize - Send it to one of you