We don't have too much advice for you here, I'm afraid. Our personal experience was that the Raspberry Pi falls into a gap between low-end ARM devices and high-end Arduino devices.... we discovered that you could make a decent ARM server (like a TI Pandaboard) available on the Internet and teach ARM programming; skills transferable to the R. Pi but are much better taught on something a little more powerful like the Panda or Beagle boards... still, I will ask around the community and see what others think...

At 01:31 PM 9/7/2012, you wrote:
Hi,

My name is Kyle Jones and I work for a Career Center in Ohio. I recently came out of the IT field and I am now in education. Some of my teachers and I have been wanting to develop a Raspberry Pi class. However I am not sure where to start, all I know is I want to add the price of the Raspberry Pi into the tuition of the class along with some extras. I did not know if you had any idea or if MIT was going to run classes involving the Raspberry Pi.

Thanks for the help.

Kyle Jones


_______________________________________________
Hardwarehacking mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/hardwarehacking

Reply via email to