Sounds awesome
until you have to start learning all the bloody Kata and having to sweep the floor before class starts :(
The Raspberry Pi Foundation and the CoderDojo Foundation have merged in order to combine forces and accelerate both organisation's mission to teach kids how to code. Raspberry Pi Foundation CEO Philip Colligan wrote that the two organisations “see an opportunity to do even more by joining forces.” CoderDojo's executive …
Kata is a form you do in martial arts where you run through the moves you have been taught in a set order you often do it as part of a Karata belt grading, Tai Chi is a bit like doing a Kata (though usually a lot slower).
The op was referring to that, sweeping the floor and setting up in a martial class is usually done by the least senior students if it's very traditional.
E-E-E is usually attributed to Microsoft. Is there some point you are trying to make?
Of course, the success of the RPi has attracted the attention of Microsoft; a programmable version of Minecraft was available on a Pi before Microsoft bought it (Minecraft). There is also Windows IoT that turns a Pi into a Programmable Board, when it really is a full blown computer. There was a lot of misleading reports about the Pi running Windows from this story. The BBC Microbit, much publicised by the BBC, launched with a few editors, but the Microbit website now seems dominated by Microsoft. There does not seem to be a thriving community pushing it forward. The initial promise of the Microbit seems to be drifting away.
I don't know what impact CoderDojo and its Microsoft partner are planning to do, but I do hope it gets our youngsters interested in coding and associated skills. How much Microsoft gets pushed in the new organisation will be interesting, but like all voluntary resources we cannot be pushed to do things we don't want to do. We might be pushed out, but there is still the internet, that I can still access from my Pi.
AC because, well... just because
There is absolutely no mystery here.
The large segment of more-mature RPi buyers which has been overlooking the RPi's shortcomings--and they are far too many to be overlooked in today's environment--has stopped doing that, and has stopped buying (tried programming the RPi in Assembly Language? You can't. Most wannabe serious designers don't find this out until they've ordered one or two. Or ten). The RPi group will cheerily suggest that you design your project as an embedded Linux application.
That leaves what market segment? Why, the very young crowd, of course, which was supposed to be the original target of the RPi Foundation's pitch, and who are now responsible for generating large sales numbers. How can we do that?
Well, the PiZero didn't work. Buying the MagPi magazine didn't work. Developers--who are, by definition, serious--have universally shunned the "Compute Module" because it is, after all, STILL a poor excuse for a serious design tool (a "cheap little board", as one website recently put it). This leaves what?
Why, merge with a CoderDojo, of course.
Now it will become clear as to who has been creating all those numbers for the RPi.
And it will become very clear that the party's over.