Reptile Smile
Well-Known Member
That's why I think the Pi is a waste of time and money for the vast majority. Everyone can afford a PC, or already has one. And Pi emulators are available at zero cost. If you can't program the emulator, the Pi is completely useless.
That's a crazy argument. That's like saying no one should take flying lessons without trying Flight Simulator, because if you can't do that, you won't be able to fly the real thing.
Sure, install an emulator - why not? But the Pi has I/O ready to go (though the pins are bizarrely numbered) and - in the end - most people want to learn an environment and stick with it. All of the control section of our Computing GCSE at school at which I teach is taught through Raspberry Pi's, not because you can't make lights blink any other way - of course you can - but we want to build for the future and allow kids the chance to program in an environment that's cheap enough to build for specific projects, and get them to feel confident in a specific system so that they can transfer their skills in ways we hadn't foreseen.