Kano’s Computer Kit takes a lot of the hard work out of assembling and setting up a Raspberry Pi for educational purposes… and leaves you with a lot of relatively easy work as you learn the basics of ...
The Kano Computer Kit is a kid-friendly computer designed to teach kids not only how to turn on a computer and play games, but also how to code and how to understand hardware. Each kit includes a ...
Kano, a do-it-yourself computer that looks to get children to begin coding at an early age, has announced that it will be upgrading its kit and that it has received $15 million in funding. The company ...
In the late 1980s a select group of British teens were given (or saved up their pocket money to buy) a small, rubber-keyed home PC called the Sinclair ZX Spectrum. My brother was one of them. And that ...
To quicken the development of Kano OS and its innards, the team behind the creation of the "fast, fun, friendly OS" have made it free to Raspberry Pi 2. This software works with games, web browsing, a ...
If you have ever wanted to build your very own personal mini PC, but have put it off because you think you may not have the skills you need to satisfactorily complete the task. You might be interested ...
Billed as "the computer anyone can make," the US$99 Kano kit supplies a Raspberry Pi computer board with the various accouterments (save for a display) required to make it into a complete computer.
Mark Zuckerberg, and Facebook, are trying to encourage high school students to get into tech and coding. It’s part of a strategy to attract young techies, who have the right skills, to work for them.
Kano has this week announced they have updated their awesome Raspberry Pi learning kit to now include the recently launched and much faster Raspberry Pi 2 mini PC. To re-cap the Raspberry Pi 2 mini PC ...
Kickstarter success story Kano, which promises to teach anyone how to code and build a computer, has a new kit that's simpler, speedier, and smarter, but retains its $150 price tag. Kano raised more ...
I have a confession to make: I’ve never built my own computer. This comes from someone whose father was a programmer at IBM, and worked in the days when a single machine was big enough to fill an ...