Summer Code Contest poster

Here’s an A3 poster for you to print out and hang up at your school, scout group, coding club, Makespace, Hacklab or youth club to publicise our summer coding contest for kids, announced this weekend at Games Britannia (and already making the news). Thanks, as ever, to the most excellent Paul Beech for the graphical wizardry.

Click to download PDF version

If you don’t own a Raspberry Pi, don’t panic: you can still enter. Use QEMU to emulate the Raspberry Pi in Windows. (There are descriptions of what you’ll need to do in this forum thread.)

Edit to add: A few of you have been asking about whether using existing software libraries or third-party assets (like graphics) counts as being “all my own work”.

If you use a publicly available software library such as Pygame, that’s absolutely fine. 

If you use assets created by someone else, that’s something we’ll be looking at on a case-by-case basis. We’ll be expecting you to declare what work you did on the project, and what was done by somebody else. We’ll expect the vast majority of the work to have been done by you; but we do understand that not everybody is a renaissance man who has the skills to both code and produce graphics at the same level. A couple of thousand lines of code written by you which manipulates a few sprites drawn by your friend will be OK; for reference, that’s the sort of balance we’ll be looking for.

 


A QR-code poster for all you guerrilla marketing types

Jonas Butz, a high school student from Germany, was on Twitter the other day, and showed us a rather excellent QR code poster pointing at this website which he’d made after a hard day’s designing Lego cases. We retweeted it, and it turned out to be extremely popular, so I’ve asked his permission to post it here so those of you who don’t do the Twitter thing can see it and download it.

Raspberry Pi QR code

Jonas has made the QR code available as a .png file, so you can download it by right-clicking on the image, enlarge it to whatever size you fancy, print it out and stick it all over your school or place of work to entice people to visit our website. Spread the word – and thank you, Jonas!

(Edit: the original QR code was occasionally not being recognised by people using Barcode Scanner on Android devices – we’d had some reports of it working most, but not all of the time. Jonas has also made this version, with a slightly smaller raspberry in the middle of it, which Barcode Scanner seems to be much happier with.)