Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-08 Thread Jochem van Dieten
Dick Applebaum wrote:
 
 Are you saying that while the CFMX approach is good enough for you and 
 I to use,it is not good enough for our kids?

I am saying that the HTML approach is a necessary evil nowadays. But we 
are supposed to be educating these kids for the future, so we might just 
as well teach them something more durable.


 What do you propose instead?

Don't teach them one particular toolset, teach them concepts.

Jochem

-- 
Never steer by the rearview mirror when driving forward.

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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-08 Thread Dick Applebaum
On Sunday, December 8, 2002, at 03:33 AM, Jochem van Dieten wrote:

 Dick Applebaum wrote:

 Are you saying that while the CFMX approach is good enough for you and
 I to use,it is not good enough for our kids?

 I am saying that the HTML approach is a necessary evil nowadays. But we
 are supposed to be educating these kids for the future, so we might 
 just
 as well teach them something more durable.


 What do you propose instead?

 Don't teach them one particular toolset, teach them concepts.



I agree with both points.  But, teaching/learning is enhanced  when the 
students participate. We need a toolset that allows the concepts to be 
demonstrated.

Jim Davis said it best:

I think with CF you have the potential to teach the concepts without 
the
language getting in the way. 

Dick

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Stacy Young
I think it's cool...schools here teach office starting in grade 7 or less...


-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 5:05 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

Mike

Isn't Kay's  idea really great?

I didn't mean using trying to compete with word for producing clear, 
concise html -- who could do that :)

Rather, schools teach word and excel for their data presentation and 
problem-solving capabilities, respectively.

More importantly, the use of these tools is likely standalone.

  CF4K, would broaden the problem-solving and presentation capabilities 
and add the ability to interact with others over the web or a LAN.

All the schools are wired for the internet, right ? -- I saw Bill and 
Al on TV, laying the cables.  And we continue to pay taxes (phone 
bills) for this.

So the Internet should available to all schools (but access may be 
restricted).

I think that many high schools have LANs for their computer labs.

These likely are used mainly by the instructors to broadcast the lesson 
to all the displays and to monitor or assist individual students.

Your idea about  DWMX is an excellent one.

I think we could go a step further.

Make available a Modified Trial version of CFMX especially for 
classrooms.  One that they could install on a server (or the main 
computer on the LAN, that acts as such).

Then schools could teach problem solving, development collaboration, 
web/network application development, etc -- without needing access to 
the Internet

The components would be something like:

HTML as the basic presentation layer
Flash, etc, for the rich/extended presentation layer
CFML for the problem solving layer
SQL for the data management layer

The SQL piece is already available (open source, or from several 
vendors)  For example,
Sybase_ASE has an free, easy to install, full-featured database (very 
similar to SQL-Server) that allows 25 (I think) concurrent 
connections-- even that's not a problem as CFMX pools connections.

Getting back to Kay's original request, what's missing is some 
tutorials oriented to kids -- there are companies that specialize in 
doing that for any topic -- but I suspect that many of the members of 
this list have the talents necessary to develop CF4K material.

It must be a slow day -- is some holiday approaching?

This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.

Maybe, everyone sees the potential and are busy presenting the case for 
this or that to those who can make it happen -- that's what I did!


Dick



On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 10:10 AM, Mike Brunt wrote:

 This is a truly great thought Kay (IMHO).  And Dick you are right 
 Word-Excel
 are diabolical for creating good plain html.  I wonder if someone at
 Macromedia is listening, maybe there could a stripped down free DWMX 
 lite
 distributed to schools to help kids learn basic html skills in the way 
 they
 do best, by visual example first then slowly bring them into the code 
 and of
 course CF.



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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Jochem van Dieten
Dick Applebaum wrote:
 
 This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.

cynical
That is because most people with experience in that field expect the 
resistance to change that seems to be inherent in educational systems to 
overcome this idea just like all great ideas of the past.
/cynical

Apart from the fact that I don't think it is such a great idea at all. 
Learn kids to write in a concise and structured way, don't give them 
HTML to play with (just think of the poor teachers that have to grade 
something that was written with inordinate amounts of blink tags and 
text colors on a purple background). If you want to add layout, add some 
stylesheets and XSLT and let the rounding of the mark depend on it, but 
the mixing of content and layout is something you *don't* want to teach 
children.

Maybe we will raise a generation that understands the difference between 
form and substance.

Jochem

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Matt Robertson
CF4K... What about tying in Flash4K as well?  Then there'd finally be a
learning path I'd have the time and capacity to grasp :D

--Matt Robertson--
MSB Designs, Inc.
http://mysecretbase.com



-Original Message-
From: Stacy Young [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 2:36 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for
kids


I think it's cool...schools here teach office starting in grade 7 or
less...


-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 5:05 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

Mike

Isn't Kay's  idea really great?

I didn't mean using trying to compete with word for producing clear, 
concise html -- who could do that :)

Rather, schools teach word and excel for their data presentation and 
problem-solving capabilities, respectively.

More importantly, the use of these tools is likely standalone.

  CF4K, would broaden the problem-solving and presentation capabilities 
and add the ability to interact with others over the web or a LAN.

All the schools are wired for the internet, right ? -- I saw Bill and 
Al on TV, laying the cables.  And we continue to pay taxes (phone 
bills) for this.

So the Internet should available to all schools (but access may be 
restricted).

I think that many high schools have LANs for their computer labs.

These likely are used mainly by the instructors to broadcast the lesson 
to all the displays and to monitor or assist individual students.

Your idea about  DWMX is an excellent one.

I think we could go a step further.

Make available a Modified Trial version of CFMX especially for 
classrooms.  One that they could install on a server (or the main 
computer on the LAN, that acts as such).

Then schools could teach problem solving, development collaboration, 
web/network application development, etc -- without needing access to 
the Internet

The components would be something like:

HTML as the basic presentation layer
Flash, etc, for the rich/extended presentation layer
CFML for the problem solving layer
SQL for the data management layer

The SQL piece is already available (open source, or from several 
vendors)  For example,
Sybase_ASE has an free, easy to install, full-featured database (very 
similar to SQL-Server) that allows 25 (I think) concurrent 
connections-- even that's not a problem as CFMX pools connections.

Getting back to Kay's original request, what's missing is some 
tutorials oriented to kids -- there are companies that specialize in 
doing that for any topic -- but I suspect that many of the members of 
this list have the talents necessary to develop CF4K material.

It must be a slow day -- is some holiday approaching?

This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.

Maybe, everyone sees the potential and are busy presenting the case for 
this or that to those who can make it happen -- that's what I did!


Dick



On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 10:10 AM, Mike Brunt wrote:

 This is a truly great thought Kay (IMHO).  And Dick you are right 
 Word-Excel
 are diabolical for creating good plain html.  I wonder if someone at
 Macromedia is listening, maybe there could a stripped down free DWMX 
 lite
 distributed to schools to help kids learn basic html skills in the way

 they
 do best, by visual example first then slowly bring them into the code 
 and of
 course CF.




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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Jochem van Dieten
Stacy Young wrote:
 I think it's cool...schools here teach office starting in grade 7 or less...

Q: Can you spell?
A: F7

Jochem

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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread S . Isaac Dealey
 Stacy Young wrote:
 I think it's cool...schools here teach office starting in
 grade 7 or less...

 Q: Can you spell?
 A: F7

The keyboard shortcut for check-spelling?

s. isaac dealey954-776-0046

new epoch  http://www.turnkey.to

lead architect, tapestry cms   http://products.turnkey.to

certified advanced coldfusion 5 developer
http://www.macromedia.com/v1/handlers/index.cfm?ID=21816


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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Tony Weeg
but of course it is, heck i think it was f7 way
back in word perfect on my 386, and it followed
to this new thing called microsoft word, now
it still lives in office xp 

tony

-Original Message-
From: S. Isaac Dealey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 6:33 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for
kids


 Stacy Young wrote:
 I think it's cool...schools here teach office starting in
 grade 7 or less...

 Q: Can you spell?
 A: F7

The keyboard shortcut for check-spelling?

s. isaac dealey954-776-0046

new epoch  http://www.turnkey.to

lead architect, tapestry cms   http://products.turnkey.to

certified advanced coldfusion 5 developer
http://www.macromedia.com/v1/handlers/index.cfm?ID=21816



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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread samcfug
Actually the best starting place for the youngsters is to use pre-built
templates, available everywhere for free, to use Web builder apps provided by
the host.  They always have the option to view and tweak the HTML code that
underlies the site.

More advanced languages, such as CF, PHP, XML, JavaScript, Perl, various flavors
of SQL, etc. are for the more advanced students, and usually the ones that have
a proclivity for structured programming languages.

Web sites that appear cool to the kids (for the wow factor among their peers)
are completely different in concept from what a business-oriented adult
developer will consider Cool.



=
Douglas White
group Manager
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.samcfug.org
=
- Original Message -
From: Jochem van Dieten [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: CF-Talk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 5:13 PM
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids


| Dick Applebaum wrote:
| 
|  This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.
|
| cynical
| That is because most people with experience in that field expect the
| resistance to change that seems to be inherent in educational systems to
| overcome this idea just like all great ideas of the past.
| /cynical
|
| Apart from the fact that I don't think it is such a great idea at all.
| Learn kids to write in a concise and structured way, don't give them
| HTML to play with (just think of the poor teachers that have to grade
| something that was written with inordinate amounts of blink tags and
| text colors on a purple background). If you want to add layout, add some
| stylesheets and XSLT and let the rounding of the mark depend on it, but
| the mixing of content and layout is something you *don't* want to teach
| children.
|
| Maybe we will raise a generation that understands the difference between
| form and substance.
|
| Jochem
|
| 
~|
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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Dick Applebaum
On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 03:13 PM, Jochem van Dieten wrote:

 Dick Applebaum wrote:

 This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.

 cynical
 That is because most people with experience in that field expect the
 resistance to change that seems to be inherent in educational systems 
 to
 overcome this idea just like all great ideas of the past.
 /cynical

I, actually, do have some experience in that field (computer training 
in high school), although a bit dated.

I was involved in a project that installed the first computer LAN in a 
high school.

There was some  initial resistance (as there is with all change).  But, 
once people grasped the concept and the benefits, acceptance, well, 
just snowballed!

The lab became a prototype and everyone involved benefitted -- 
particularly the students -- there were high school students opening 
their own computer consulting firms.


 Apart from the fact that I don't think it is such a great idea at all.
 Learn kids to write in a concise and structured way, don't give them
 HTML to play with (just think of the poor teachers that have to grade
 something that was written with inordinate amounts of blink tags and
 text colors on a purple background). If you want to add layout, add 
 some
 stylesheets and XSLT and let the rounding of the mark depend on it, but
 the mixing of content and layout is something you *don't* want to teach
 children.

I agree that writing skills are very important and should be learned in 
a structured way.

But we are discussing additional skills to bring the content (the 
results of writing kills) to a broader audience the internet.

Kids will learn to program the Internet -- just because it's there!

Why leave them to their own devices and some of the more obscure 
languages -- to helter-skelter mix format layout and content.

Rather, teach them to do it right (better) with superior tools.

Are you saying that while the CFMX approach is good enough for you and 
I to use,it is not good enough for our kids?

What do you propose instead?

Finally, I think that kids will not have much trouble grasping the 
difference between content and layout (packaging), as they are 
constantly exposed to it in there everyday lives.

I think that, properly presented, the value of both form and substance 
can be learned -- and the web contains millions of examples (good and 
bad) of both.


Dick



 Maybe we will raise a generation that understands the difference 
 between
 form and substance.

 Jochem

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Stacy Young
This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're building
e-com systems.

http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html



-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 6:47 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 03:13 PM, Jochem van Dieten wrote:

 Dick Applebaum wrote:

 This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.

 cynical
 That is because most people with experience in that field expect the
 resistance to change that seems to be inherent in educational systems 
 to
 overcome this idea just like all great ideas of the past.
 /cynical

I, actually, do have some experience in that field (computer training 
in high school), although a bit dated.

I was involved in a project that installed the first computer LAN in a 
high school.

There was some  initial resistance (as there is with all change).  But, 
once people grasped the concept and the benefits, acceptance, well, 
just snowballed!

The lab became a prototype and everyone involved benefitted -- 
particularly the students -- there were high school students opening 
their own computer consulting firms.


 Apart from the fact that I don't think it is such a great idea at all.
 Learn kids to write in a concise and structured way, don't give them
 HTML to play with (just think of the poor teachers that have to grade
 something that was written with inordinate amounts of blink tags and
 text colors on a purple background). If you want to add layout, add 
 some
 stylesheets and XSLT and let the rounding of the mark depend on it, but
 the mixing of content and layout is something you *don't* want to teach
 children.

I agree that writing skills are very important and should be learned in 
a structured way.

But we are discussing additional skills to bring the content (the 
results of writing kills) to a broader audience the internet.

Kids will learn to program the Internet -- just because it's there!

Why leave them to their own devices and some of the more obscure 
languages -- to helter-skelter mix format layout and content.

Rather, teach them to do it right (better) with superior tools.

Are you saying that while the CFMX approach is good enough for you and 
I to use,it is not good enough for our kids?

What do you propose instead?

Finally, I think that kids will not have much trouble grasping the 
difference between content and layout (packaging), as they are 
constantly exposed to it in there everyday lives.

I think that, properly presented, the value of both form and substance 
can be learned -- and the web contains millions of examples (good and 
bad) of both.


Dick



 Maybe we will raise a generation that understands the difference 
 between
 form and substance.

 Jochem


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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Stacy Young
Part of the curriculum is Flash and DW LOL


-Original Message-
From: Stacy Young 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 7:33 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids


This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're building
e-com systems.

http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html



-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 6:47 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 03:13 PM, Jochem van Dieten wrote:

 Dick Applebaum wrote:

 This is such a great idea, that I am surprised by  the few responses.

 cynical
 That is because most people with experience in that field expect the
 resistance to change that seems to be inherent in educational systems 
 to
 overcome this idea just like all great ideas of the past.
 /cynical

I, actually, do have some experience in that field (computer training 
in high school), although a bit dated.

I was involved in a project that installed the first computer LAN in a 
high school.

There was some  initial resistance (as there is with all change).  But, 
once people grasped the concept and the benefits, acceptance, well, 
just snowballed!

The lab became a prototype and everyone involved benefitted -- 
particularly the students -- there were high school students opening 
their own computer consulting firms.


 Apart from the fact that I don't think it is such a great idea at all.
 Learn kids to write in a concise and structured way, don't give them
 HTML to play with (just think of the poor teachers that have to grade
 something that was written with inordinate amounts of blink tags and
 text colors on a purple background). If you want to add layout, add 
 some
 stylesheets and XSLT and let the rounding of the mark depend on it, but
 the mixing of content and layout is something you *don't* want to teach
 children.

I agree that writing skills are very important and should be learned in 
a structured way.

But we are discussing additional skills to bring the content (the 
results of writing kills) to a broader audience the internet.

Kids will learn to program the Internet -- just because it's there!

Why leave them to their own devices and some of the more obscure 
languages -- to helter-skelter mix format layout and content.

Rather, teach them to do it right (better) with superior tools.

Are you saying that while the CFMX approach is good enough for you and 
I to use,it is not good enough for our kids?

What do you propose instead?

Finally, I think that kids will not have much trouble grasping the 
difference between content and layout (packaging), as they are 
constantly exposed to it in there everyday lives.

I think that, properly presented, the value of both form and substance 
can be learned -- and the web contains millions of examples (good and 
bad) of both.


Dick



 Maybe we will raise a generation that understands the difference 
 between
 form and substance.

 Jochem


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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Dick Applebaum
On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 04:33 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
 pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're 
 building
 e-com systems.

 http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html


Impressed!

That's quite a site!

Do most of the highschools in Canada have computer labs, as in the US?

With what do they build their e-com sites?

Dick

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Stacy Young
I would say they do...school system is quite good in most areas. We had a
computer lab when I was in elementary school. (All MACs/Apples)...There were
maybe 15 machinesand that was back in..um...83-84 maybe?

Most projects involved working with a program called Logo...it was a little
turtle that u would program to draw pictures. That's actually what generated
my first interest in puters.

FD 60   (forward 60 pixels)
RT 45   (right turn 45 degrees)
FD 100
LT 90
FD 150

There were school contests for drawing more elaborate things that involved
some flash-like programming...

Stace

-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 7:51 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 04:33 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
 pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're 
 building
 e-com systems.

 http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html


Impressed!

That's quite a site!

Do most of the highschools in Canada have computer labs, as in the US?

With what do they build their e-com sites?

Dick


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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Dick Applebaum
On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 04:33 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
 pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're 
 building
 e-com systems.

 http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html


Well, here is the high school that installed the first computer lab 
network in June 1980:

 7 Apple ][ computers networked to a 5 MB Corvus Hard disk and a 
Centronics printer

 Only the administrators Apple ][ had floppy drives.

http://www.saratogahigh.org/shs/academics/academics.html

My daughter is an alumnus of SHS, -- though she never took computer lab.

I haven't had contact with anyone at the school since !988 -- but they 
seem to be doing quite well.

As I mentioned, SHS was the prototype for HS computer labs all over the 
US.

Mmmm... maybe they are already doing web stuff  just need to upgrade 
to dynamic content

Dick

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Stacy Young
Maybe this thread is going a little OT here but one last comment...Just read
that some elementary schools here are teaching multimedia math...in
kindergarten !! Damn...all we did was draw with crayons and throw paint
everywhere...

Stace

-Original Message-
From: Stacy Young [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 8:03 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

I would say they do...school system is quite good in most areas. We had a
computer lab when I was in elementary school. (All MACs/Apples)...There were
maybe 15 machinesand that was back in..um...83-84 maybe?

Most projects involved working with a program called Logo...it was a little
turtle that u would program to draw pictures. That's actually what generated
my first interest in puters.

FD 60   (forward 60 pixels)
RT 45   (right turn 45 degrees)
FD 100
LT 90
FD 150

There were school contests for drawing more elaborate things that involved
some flash-like programming...

Stace

-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 7:51 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 04:33 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
 pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're 
 building
 e-com systems.

 http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html


Impressed!

That's quite a site!

Do most of the highschools in Canada have computer labs, as in the US?

With what do they build their e-com sites?

Dick



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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Dick Applebaum
Yes!

Logo!

Who can forget the turtle  turtlegraphics?

Dick

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 05:02 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 I would say they do...school system is quite good in most areas. We 
 had a
 computer lab when I was in elementary school. (All 
 MACs/Apples)...There were
 maybe 15 machinesand that was back in..um...83-84 maybe?

 Most projects involved working with a program called Logo...it was a 
 little
 turtle that u would program to draw pictures. That's actually what 
 generated
 my first interest in puters.

 FD 60   (forward 60 pixels)
 RT 45   (right turn 45 degrees)
 FD 100
 LT 90
 FD 150

 There were school contests for drawing more elaborate things that 
 involved
 some flash-like programming...

 Stace

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Stacy Young
Ya it seems every site I've checked are into all kinds of multimedia and
web...


-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 8:09 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 04:33 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 This is my old highschool...was mostly gangs back when I was there but
 pretty impressive changes in recent years...by grade 11 they're 
 building
 e-com systems.

 http://www.riverdalehighonline.com/showcase.html


Well, here is the high school that installed the first computer lab 
network in June 1980:

 7 Apple ][ computers networked to a 5 MB Corvus Hard disk and a 
Centronics printer

 Only the administrators Apple ][ had floppy drives.

http://www.saratogahigh.org/shs/academics/academics.html

My daughter is an alumnus of SHS, -- though she never took computer lab.

I haven't had contact with anyone at the school since !988 -- but they 
seem to be doing quite well.

As I mentioned, SHS was the prototype for HS computer labs all over the 
US.

Mmmm... maybe they are already doing web stuff  just need to upgrade 
to dynamic content

Dick


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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Dick Applebaum
On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 05:09 PM, Stacy Young wrote:

 Maybe this thread is going a little OT here but one last 
 comment...Just read
 that some elementary schools here are teaching multimedia math...in
 kindergarten !! Damn...all we did was draw with crayons and throw paint
 everywhere...




What about clay-class, finger-painting and paper-machae [sp]  -- Oh, 
those were in High school in Pasadena, California.

It's a slow day, Michael and Judith are tolerant ---

--- and Kay's original post was spot on!

This is an opportunity, if I've ever seen one!

Dick

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Matt Robertson
I can't help myself... I have to chime in.  Totally OT:  

Dick Applebaum wrote:
 Well, here is the high school that installed the first computer lab 
 network in June 1980:
  snip
 http://www.saratogahigh.org/shs/academics/academics.html

Small world.  I graduated from Fremont High in June 1980, which is in
the same town and high school district as Saratoga High.  We were pretty
fierce rivals.  At the time all we had was a few Commodore PETs, and a
LOT of cobbled-together stuff, much of it hand-me-downs from parents
working in/around HP, Atari, Lockheed, Fairchild et al.

Wasn't it SHS where the entire senior class all got straight F's on
their report cards cuz persons-unknown broke into the FUHSD system
and... Tinkered?  Was either 1979 or 1980.  Killed too many gray cells
since to remember exactly.  

Great time/place to grow up:  Sunnyvale CA, right when all that PC stuff
started.

--Matt Robertson--
MSB Designs, Inc.
http://mysecretbase.com



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Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Dick Applebaum
Matt

Really, Really OT

If you were a computer geek between 1978 and 1989, then we've probably  
met!

Yeah, I know FHS -- Freemont and Saratoga-Sunnyvale.

I and 2 others owned some computer stores, one was  2 blocks away at  
Fremont and Mary -- Computer Plus --across the parking lot from the  
Velvet Turtle.

You guys (FHS) were behind in some ways, but you had cable TV   VCRs  
in every classroom (unique at that time).

There was a teacher there Jerry -- can't remember his last name but, he  
was really progressive and liked by the students -- Jerry was trying to  
set up a computer lab -- got no support from anybody.

We did some small stuff with FHS, but it never really got going.

Anyway, FHS was in a different district than SHS, with completely  
different funding.

But we had several FHS students on our payroll -- between  
skateboarding, and Hires graphics they helped sell a lot of computers.

Greg Porter, Joe Wilson come to mind.

A few years after you graduated, Woz tried to donate several million to  
Sunnyvale HS (same district) to set up a computer lab,

But, politics got in the way  they could never could figure out what  
to do with the money.

You/we grew in the heart of Silicon Valley, when everything was  
exciting  new!

Dick

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 06:43 PM, Matt Robertson wrote:

 I can't help myself... I have to chime in.  Totally OT:

 Dick Applebaum wrote:
 Well, here is the high school that installed the first computer lab
 network in June 1980:
   snip
 http://www.saratogahigh.org/shs/academics/academics.html

 Small world.  I graduated from Fremont High in June 1980, which is in
 the same town and high school district as Saratoga High.  We were  
 pretty
 fierce rivals.  At the time all we had was a few Commodore PETs, and a
 LOT of cobbled-together stuff, much of it hand-me-downs from parents
 working in/around HP, Atari, Lockheed, Fairchild et al.

 Wasn't it SHS where the entire senior class all got straight F's on
 their report cards cuz persons-unknown broke into the FUHSD system
 and... Tinkered?  Was either 1979 or 1980.  Killed too many gray cells
 since to remember exactly.

 Great time/place to grow up:  Sunnyvale CA, right when all that PC  
 stuff
 started.

 --Matt Robertson--
 MSB Designs, Inc.
 http://mysecretbase.com



 
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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Matt Robertson
LAST on-list OT, I promise!

We have met, I think.  I know that store if my (hazy) recollection is
correct.

Near a Farrells and the Bicycle Tree?  I dinked around on some
***really*** early Apple computers there.  Highly advanced casette
recorder used to load programs.  Way too sophisticated for floppies.

If that was you, then a) I remember it quite well and b) you bear
partial blame for getting me interested in this field.

Man, talk about memory lane!  I took boxing at Sunnyvale High.  Tough
crowd ;)

--Matt--



-Original Message-
From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 7:22 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for
kids


Matt

Really, Really OT

If you were a computer geek between 1978 and 1989, then we've probably  
met!

Yeah, I know FHS -- Freemont and Saratoga-Sunnyvale.

I and 2 others owned some computer stores, one was  2 blocks away at  
Fremont and Mary -- Computer Plus --across the parking lot from the  
Velvet Turtle.

You guys (FHS) were behind in some ways, but you had cable TV   VCRs  
in every classroom (unique at that time).

There was a teacher there Jerry -- can't remember his last name but, he

was really progressive and liked by the students -- Jerry was trying to

set up a computer lab -- got no support from anybody.

We did some small stuff with FHS, but it never really got going.

Anyway, FHS was in a different district than SHS, with completely  
different funding.

But we had several FHS students on our payroll -- between  
skateboarding, and Hires graphics they helped sell a lot of computers.

Greg Porter, Joe Wilson come to mind.

A few years after you graduated, Woz tried to donate several million to

Sunnyvale HS (same district) to set up a computer lab,

But, politics got in the way  they could never could figure out what  
to do with the money.

You/we grew in the heart of Silicon Valley, when everything was  
exciting  new!

Dick

On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 06:43 PM, Matt Robertson wrote:

 I can't help myself... I have to chime in.  Totally OT:

 Dick Applebaum wrote:
 Well, here is the high school that installed the first computer lab
 network in June 1980:
   snip
 http://www.saratogahigh.org/shs/academics/academics.html

 Small world.  I graduated from Fremont High in June 1980, which is in
 the same town and high school district as Saratoga High.  We were  
 pretty
 fierce rivals.  At the time all we had was a few Commodore PETs, and a
 LOT of cobbled-together stuff, much of it hand-me-downs from parents
 working in/around HP, Atari, Lockheed, Fairchild et al.

 Wasn't it SHS where the entire senior class all got straight F's on
 their report cards cuz persons-unknown broke into the FUHSD system
 and... Tinkered?  Was either 1979 or 1980.  Killed too many gray cells
 since to remember exactly.

 Great time/place to grow up:  Sunnyvale CA, right when all that PC  
 stuff
 started.

 --Matt Robertson--
 MSB Designs, Inc.
 http://mysecretbase.com



 

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RE: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for kids

2002-12-07 Thread Bill Henderson
This led me to do some searching for Logo and turtle graphics (2nd grade
for me) and I found this, and it actually pertains to the original
thread (kind of)
http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?WhatSortOfComputationWouldInterestJuniorSchoolCh
ildren

This is an off-shoot of an article talking about Logo in general. The
link for that is: http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?LogoLanguage




 -Original Message-
 From: Dick Applebaum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Saturday, December 07, 2002 5:13 PM
 To: CF-Talk
 Subject: Re: CF4K was Re: Macromedia listening? is RE: ColdFusion for
kids
 
 Yes!
 
 Logo!
 
 Who can forget the turtle  turtlegraphics?
 
 Dick
 
 On Saturday, December 7, 2002, at 05:02 PM, Stacy Young wrote:
 
  I would say they do...school system is quite good in most areas. We
  had a
  computer lab when I was in elementary school. (All
  MACs/Apples)...There were
  maybe 15 machinesand that was back in..um...83-84 maybe?
 
  Most projects involved working with a program called Logo...it was a
  little
  turtle that u would program to draw pictures. That's actually what
  generated
  my first interest in puters.
 
  FD 60   (forward 60 pixels)
  RT 45   (right turn 45 degrees)
  FD 100
  LT 90
  FD 150
 
  There were school contests for drawing more elaborate things that
  involved
  some flash-like programming...
 
  Stace
 
 
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