News

The micro:bit is a small computer board with an ARM Cortex-M0 microprocessor plus sensors and LEDS. It is part of an initiative to get kids coding.
I was thinking that these could be used with the micro:bits to spice them up for our trick-or-treaters. We are trying to figure out exactly how we want to integrate the micro:bits into our Halloween ...
The BBC Micro:bit, while not quite as popular in our community as other microcontroller development boards, ... Our favorite part has to be the infinity mirror heart, ...
The BBC micro:bit has been with us for about eighteen months now, and while the little ARM-based board has made a name for itself in its intended market of education, we haven’t seen as much … ...
We offered a free classroom set of 30 micro:bits to primary schools across the UK as part of our BBC micro:bit - the next gen campaign. The deadline for UK primary school teachers to sign up for a ...
Even though it appears sparse, the micro:bit is actually slightly more user-friendly than a Raspberry Pi; besides its 32-bit ARM Cortex M0 processor and 16K of RAM (sounds like a pithy number but ...
Even so, Kitronik - an electronics parts supplier involved in the Micro Bit initiative - posed itself the challenge using 1,009 prototypes it had been given access to.
It's National Apprenticeship Week! As part of our BBC micro:bit – the next gen campaign, we spoke to apprentices Coel and Matilda and student Lowena about why the micro:bit matters. They told us ...
Problems with the micro:bit's power supply are being blamed for ... WIRED.co.uk editor Michael Rundle is presenting a series of eight radio programs for BBC 5Live as part of the 'Make It Digital ...