BBC micro:bit computer memory

PART OF:
BBC micro:bit computer memory
Made:
2012-2016 in Salford
Two BBC micro:bits. These are 'Launch Boards' Two BBC micro:bits. These are 'Launch Boards'

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Two BBC micro:bits. These are 'Launch Boards'
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Two BBC micro:bits. These are 'Launch Boards'
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

One of two BBC micro:bits. This is a 'Launch Board', with black buttons, and without the text 'micro:bit' on the rear.

The devices were distributed by the Micro:bit Educational Foundation in the UK and around the world, for 8-14 year-olds to learn basic coding and programming. 2 million BBC micro:bits were made and distributed within two years (2016-2018), in over 50 countries.

This is a unique, personal collection, brought together by the former Program Manager, Philip Meitiner. Other members of the team have retained boards that they worked on, but Philip collected the whole series as a personal record of the project. They were given to him by the BBC at the end of the project.

The BBC micro:bit was launched by BBC Learning in March 2016 as part of the BBC’s Make it Digital initiative (which was launched in March 2015), and they were delivered free to every year 7 student in England and Wales. Teachers such as Mrs Emily Rowland, Fairfield High School, Droylsden, reported: “We have launched rockets, built robots and created music all with the micro:bit.” Winners of the 2018 micro:bit Global Challenge created devices that reflected the concerns of their communities such as monitors for health, food waste, pollution, and security.

The BBC micro:bit is intended as a springboard for further learning and more advanced products like Arduino, Galileo, Kano and Raspberry Pi, and was inspired by the BBC Micro (1.5m produced) and its impact on home and school computing in the early 1980s.

Testing of the prototypes was conducted with 14 schools nationally, during Summer 2015. The series of prototypes show the innovation required to bring the computer to mass production and distribution. Issues included:

Replacing the coin cell battery with a battery pack

Fitting the Bluetooth radio aerial onto the board and meeting the required safety parameters

Minimising the risk of electrostatic discharge, while not wanting to hide the electronic components from view

Hosting the files for firmware/software, bill of materials and schematic as open source while not releasing the files for production (Gerber files)

The series also reflects the design decisions such as the shape, labelling, logo, and edge connector, and the new innovation of coloured silkscreen printing onto the circuit boards.

Details

Category:
Computing & Data Processing
Object Number:
2021-78/2
Materials:
plastic (unidentified) and metal (unknown)
type:
computer memory
credit:
Philip Meitiner