
http://www.kidsunlimited.com.au/ This company is offering a course for kids to teach them to build a PC. It costs $1250 and they end up with a PC that's very similar to something that Dell sells for $800, so that makes it about $400 for a day of training (not bad for corporate training rates but not cheap either). Maybe we should offer something vaguely similar at the LUV beginner's meetings. We could make it a BYO hardware event. We could offer free PCs of the P4 vintage (I could donate 2-3 PCs to the cause and I'm sure others could too). Then kids (and anyone else who wants to learn) can install Linux and set the PC up for doing things. The assembling new hardware bit seems like a bad idea as it involves a significant amount of money and issues with getting paid in advance etc. But the amount of learning involved in assembling a PC isn't that great. It's 5-7 separate parts for a typical PC if you consider DIMMs to be 1 part and CPU+fan to be another. Assembling a PC nowadays has the complexity of a Lego kit aimed at 5yos. Taking old PCs apart has some educational value as kids can break open packages and look inside them and they can touch pins on the CPUs etc. If we were going to do an educational PC disassembly event then I'd be happy to take the bits to e-waste and I could donate some broken PCs to the cause. What do you think? Lev, how does this fit in with what we can do at VPAC? -- My Main Blog http://etbe.coker.com.au/ My Documents Blog http://doc.coker.com.au/