On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 1:32 AM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr. jecel@merlintec.com wrote:
Karl,
New book for kids, Lauren Ipsum, under development here
Seems interesting and I quite enjoyed reading the sample chapter.
There is another sample at
http://carlos.bueno.org/2011/01/tortoise.html
The Tortoise would only be right if you could have a string with half an atom, which isn't the case :-)
I wonder about all the background information woven into a story that is meant to be a first introduction to the subject. The best children's stories have stuff that the adults can appreciate but the intended audience doesn't get, but this is on a completely different scale. Take a look at a similar (very short) story I wrote for a very specific audience and how much it ruined when you need the explanations at the end (not part of the original):
http://www.merlintec.com/lsi/stories/deadlocks.html
-- Jecel
squeakland mailing list squeakland@squeakland.org http://lists.squeakland.org/mailman/listinfo/squeakland
It seems he got full founding for this project at http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/512752850/lauren-ipsum-computer-science-...
I look forward reading the whole book.
I liked yours too Jecel. Much the same imagery. I think this kind of thinking kan give solutions to many problems faced in programming. Sometimes seeing thems as actors can make the solution to the problem seem obvious. Setting up and translating that issue in a computer is a struggle. All sorts of digressions later you can focus on the problem again, if you are lucky.
Karl