Load "Deadline", 8,1 |
But I digress.... Between the C64 and Family Computing Magazine, I taught myself BASIC. I became a wanna-be geek. My Mom said I should be a computer programmer. I wanted to be a pilot. So I became a pilot. But then decided I wanted to be a computer programmer. Listening to Mom is probably smart.
I was fortunate that I had people in my household that were able to support my fledgling geekism. Computers have changed a WHOLE lot in the decades since Copy/Paste was "look at the magazine text and type that into the console". I look at initiatives like Code.org, and I see the possibilities that I did when I was a kid. We've reached a point in our history where computers are involved in pretty much everything we do. There are even LIGHT BULBS that can be programmed to do something other than provide white light to a room. Look around and you'll probably see a vast majority of people on a cell phone or browsing the internet on some device. For my entire life, Moore's Law has held true.
AI is scary-smart, but we still need people to program both the internet and that scary-smart AI that will be writing itself all too soon. I think Hour Of Code does a fantastic job of encouraging kids to see the possibilities of what they can do. So, as they say, "What will you create?".
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