Linda Liukas: A delightful way to teach kids about computers
Linda Liukas wants to create a more diverse and colorful world of technology, starting with the poetry of code. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
that drove the whole generation.
to our imagination and our world.
more diverse set of people
and lonely and boring and magic,
that they can tinker
and so forth.
of programming and technology
on an older man,
just happened to be
of the United States, Mr. Al Gore.
teenage girl would want to do.
express all of this love,
there was no Pinterest.
all of this longing and loving.
started for me.
I would use crayons and legos.
guitar lessons and theater plays.
to get excited about,
are boring and technical and lonely.
are not supposed to like computers.
at concentrating on things
amazing questions like,
and "How?" and "What if?"
are not supposed to like computers.
is this esoteric, weird science discipline
from everyday life
and controls and data structures
we've made computers smaller and smaller.
of abstraction on top of each other
have any idea how computers work
how the human body works,
the combustion engine functions
that if you want to really be an astronaut
what happens when I press 'play,'
really, really, really fast.
these amazing, beautiful machines,
very, very foreign to us,
to the computers
how to speak to the computers anymore
French irregular verbs,
my pattern recognition skills.
a sequence of symbolic commands
between English and mathematics
and pinch their way through the world.
to build with computers,
instead of creators.
led me to this little girl.
imaginative and a little bit bossy.
I would run into a problem
myself programming like,
or what is garbage collection?",
little girl would explain the problem.
and I illustrated it
Ruby taught me go like this.
not supposed to be afraid
stuck together.
me to her friends,
to play with the other kids.
that are really friendly but super messy.
but somewhat hard to understand.
technology through play.
are really good at repeating stuff,
loops goes like this.
it goes, "Clap, clap, stomp, stomp
by repeating that four times.
by repeating that sequence
by repeating that sequence
that there are no ready answers.
for Ruby's world,
how they see the world
play testing sessions.
these four pictures.
do you think is a computer?"
very conservative and go,
spends way too much time."
that actually, a car is a computer,
might not be a computer,
a computer inside of it.
so many different kinds of computers,
and the burglar alarms.
with an on/off button on them.
"Today you have this magic ability
into a computer."
I don't know the right answer for this."
the right answer, either.
to hear about this thing
you are going to be the ones
where everything is a computer."
who came to me
if it were a computer,
what else could it do?"
were a computer,
with my father
could also be a movie projector."
is definitely not ready yet,
of making the world more ready
can be a part of that change.
and the helpful RAM and ROM
our computer together,
is to be an astronaut.
these huge headphones on
in his tiny paper computer
navigation application.
in the Martian orbit,
safely back to earth.
a profoundly different view of the world
the more inclusive,
we make the world of technology,
the world will look like.
don't only include
Silicon Valley boys,
and Norwegian librarians.
the little Ada Lovelaces of tomorrow,
reality of 1s and 0s,
and brave about technology.
and the opportunities
that is wonderful, whimsical
in Moominvalley.
I would roam around the Tatooines.
I would go to sleep in Narnia.
to be the perfect profession for me.
and paradigms and practices.
with the pure power of logic.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Linda Liukas - Programmer, storyteller and illustratorLinda Liukas wants to create a more diverse and colorful world of technology, starting with the poetry of code.
Why you should listen
Linda Liukas is a programmer, storyteller and illustrator. Her children's book, Hello Ruby, is the "world’s most whimsical way to learn about technology, computing and coding.” Liukas founded Rails Girls, which has organized workshops in over 230 cities, teaching the basics of programming to more than 10,000 women. Linda worked at Codeacademy, which she left to write stories that teach children about software and programming. She won the 2013 Ruby Hero prize and was named the Digital Champion of Finland by the EU Commissioner for Digital Agenda.
Linda Liukas | Speaker | TED.com