Ed.D
Active member
I wonder if Apple will launch their own Pi ? 
As someone currently working in IT, I beg to differ. There's a vast difference between internal complexity that requires earnest study but is ultimately comprehensible, and something that's just plain badly-designed from a UI standpoint. Linux isn't a hassle to learn, it's a hassle to use.As someone who learned computers by peeking and poking into memory adresses, I highly doubt the student that finds linux unfriendly is any viable material for future computer science studies.
Linux isn't a hassle to learn, it's a hassle to use.
Ed.D said:I wonder if Apple will launch their own Pi ?
As someone currently working in IT, I beg to differ. There's a vast difference between internal complexity that requires earnest study but is ultimately comprehensible, and something that's just plain badly-designed from a UI standpoint. Linux isn't a hassle to learn, it's a hassle to use.
or license Window$ or IO$?
As someone currently working in IT, I beg to differ. There's a vast difference between internal complexity that requires earnest study but is ultimately comprehensible, and something that's just plain badly-designed from a UI standpoint. Linux isn't a hassle to learn, it's a hassle to use.
As someone currently working in IT, I beg to differ. There's a vast difference between internal complexity that requires earnest study but is ultimately comprehensible, and something that's just plain badly-designed from a UI standpoint. Linux isn't a hassle to learn, it's a hassle to use.
The beauty with Linux is if you feel that way you are more than welcome to fix it
And to get back on topic, the whole point in Raspberry Pi is to try to ensure that there are more people who are able to fix it. It may work and it may not work, but at least they're trying to get people back into real computing rather than just "IT Skills."