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£22 ‘DIY’ mini computer goes on sale: Raspberry Pi teaches coding to kids

A hand-held computer called the Raspberry Pi has gone on sale in the UK for just £22 this week, aimed at teaching children how to programme and code.

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After going on sale yesterday, the motherboard device sold out within hours. Massive demand for the computer has caused the website of one supplier, Leeds-based Premier Farnell, to crash under the weight of heavy traffic.
The credit card-sized gadget was created by volunteers at the charitable organisation, the Raspberry Pi Foundation.
It has neither keyboard nor monitor and is a skeleton of a computer, showing the inner components of the mini PC.
Commentators have said the device could help inspire a new generation of programmers to tackle the lack of coding skills in the UK.

The £22 Raspberry Pi includes an Ethernet port but a cheaper model will be unveiled later this year for just £16.
The pocket-sized PC runs the operating system Linux – a free alternative to Windows or Mac OS, which helps keep the price ultra-low.
The chips and connectors allow users to connect cameras and other gadgets via USB, and are powerful enough to deal with hi-def video and sound.
http://www.raspberrypi.org/
View a video from the BBC explaining how the gadget works below:

Video not working? Check your browser settings for Flash acceptance, or click here for the original story from the BBC.

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