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BBC Micros used in retro programming class
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Author:  forquare1 [ Wed Aug 25, 2010 12:17 pm ]
Post subject:  BBC Micros used in retro programming class

Quote:
Computer history is cruel. It is a story of the old constantly being pushed aside for the newer, the faster, the smaller, the shinier.

Those old machines are rarely allowed a graceful retirement. Cast aside, they end their days in the dark ,fit only to be homes for spiders in lofts and cupboards.

But one lucky flock of BBC Micros is getting another lease of life by helping to educate students in the art of rigorous programming.

The National Museum of Computing (TNMOC) at Bletchley Park has started letting a few lucky A-level students loose on the machines to hone their programming skills.


Continue reading here

Quote:
In one of the first lessons held at TNMOC the lucky Ousedale students programmed a venerable PDP-8 machine by flicking the switches set on its front panel to set the binary values in its memory.

What!? No fair! I'd love to play with a PDP-8 :(

Author:  rustybucket [ Wed Aug 25, 2010 12:24 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: BBC Micros used in retro programming class

Quote:
The day of study had begun with what must be the ultimate hands-on technology experience: Mr Abrams got the students to be a computer.

They each took on the role of a different part of the machine - CPU, accumulator, RAM and program counter - and simulated the passage of instructions through the hardware.

The five shuffled data around, wrote it to memory, carried out computations and inserted them into the right places in the store.

It was a noisy, confusing and funny simulation and, once everyone knew what they were doing, managed to reach a maximum clock speed of about one instruction per minute.

Nice.

Wish my teachers had been like that.

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