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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The planned BBC Computer Literacy Project 2012, inspired by the original scheme which introduced the BBC Micro in the 1980s,[1] was being developed by BBC Learning to provide a starting place for young people and others to develop marketable skills in computing technology and program coding.[2][3]
Predecessor(s) | BBC Micro |
---|---|
Successor(s) | BBC Micro Bit |
Owner | BBC |
URL | Archived 16 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine |
Current status | Presumed Cancelled |
Unlike the original project, the 2012 version didn't prescribe a particular bespoke computer device like the BBC Micro. Rather, the interactive computer-based tools where intended to be used on a variety of platforms, including Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. Programming languages to be covered included; HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Java and Node.js. along with XML, Databases, Python, Ruby, PHP and others.[4]
Dubbed BBC Hello World, the project had four major elements:[5]
It appears the project was leaked ahead of time as the BBC never officially announced the Project and the website was soon taken down in 2012. No further announcements (or leaks) have been made.
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