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When Cracking the Code Becomes Child's Play

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When Cracking the Code Becomes Child's Play

16_06_2016_001_049_009.jpg


Over the past few years, an increasing number of school-going children has taken to coding, and how!
When 12-year-old Tanmay Bakshi from Toronto, Canada, addresses over 10,000 coders at IBM's biggest-ever developer meet in Bengaluru on Thursday, he will join a growing list of Indianorigin kids making their presence felt across the global developer stage.
Earlier this week, nine-year-old Anvitha Vijay -who has several iOS applications to her credit -was invited as the youngest-ever participant at tech giant Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco.

A few weeks earlier, 8-year-old Medansh Mehta wowed Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, who was visiting India, with a game he had created. The Navi Mumbai kid who first started coding a year ago, began with basic languages like Logo and Scratch. “You can make anything you can imagine,“ Mehta told ET when asked about why he codes.

Over the past few years, there has been a sharp increase in the number of kids taking to coding while still in school. The trend is fueled partly by parents who are comfortable with technology and end up exposing their children to it, as well as schools that have started teaching basic computer programming as early as the third grade.

For instance, Mehta's father, an avid coder, started teaching him some basics at home. 13-year-old Priyal Jain, on the other hand, learnt programming language Python at home when she was ten, and then enrolled in an android programming course at Acadgild, a Bengaluru-based technology education startup co-founded by her father Vikalp Jain and Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur Vinod Dham.

Recently , Jain teamed up with another Acadgild student, 12-yearold Prateek Mahesh to launch an android app, vPledge, at the end of an android training summer camp they attended. Mahesh learnt QBasic at school and then Python via YouTube tutorials before seeking out a programming course. A tabla player and blogger in his free time, Mahesh dreams of studying at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and starting his own tech company . Jain, on the other hand, wants to go to Stanford and eventually work at Google.

Interestingly, like Mahesh, many kids are entirely self-taught they pick up programming through online tutorials. Simran Singh discovered coding quite by accident when he was 13 and playing San Andreas, a popular video game. “I started coding servers that people could play the game on and taught myself programming through tutorials and articles online,“ said the 17-year-old Kanpur resident.He recently created an app that allows users to measure algae levels in water, something that won him a prize at Imagine Cup, a global student technology competition Microsoft hosts.

For their part, most technology companies have a slew of competi tions and programmes to get more children interested in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) globally. Last year IBM hosted Hackerupt in Bengaluru, what it said was India's first hackathon for high school kids. Directi runs CodeChef, an initiative aimed at getting more students interested in coding.

As for why giants like Apple, Microsoft and IBM are trotting out child coders at events, the answer is simple: marketing departments love child prodigies. “ As long as it's not being done just for publicity and these companies actually have programmes in place that will help develop their skills further, it is fine,“ says a former marketing head at an IT services firm.

Interestingly, when quizzed about their role models, most kids say that it is Mark Zuckerberg or Steve Jobs who inspire them. Sandy Carter, General Manager of Ecosystem Development and Social Business, IBM believes that there is a case for more home-grown role models.

http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/...g-the-Code-Becomes-Childs-Play-16062016001049
 
. .
Still can't crack total war warhammer because it uses devuno crack
denuvo was cracked,but The Chinese cracker group blew the loophole out in open.Therefore new extra measures of Denuvo.
But you and me know,it will be cracked.

When Cracking the Code Becomes Child's Play

16_06_2016_001_049_009.jpg


Over the past few years, an increasing number of school-going children has taken to coding, and how!
When 12-year-old Tanmay Bakshi from Toronto, Canada, addresses over 10,000 coders at IBM's biggest-ever developer meet in Bengaluru on Thursday, he will join a growing list of Indianorigin kids making their presence felt across the global developer stage.
Earlier this week, nine-year-old Anvitha Vijay -who has several iOS applications to her credit -was invited as the youngest-ever participant at tech giant Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco.

A few weeks earlier, 8-year-old Medansh Mehta wowed Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, who was visiting India, with a game he had created. The Navi Mumbai kid who first started coding a year ago, began with basic languages like Logo and Scratch. “You can make anything you can imagine,“ Mehta told ET when asked about why he codes.

Over the past few years, there has been a sharp increase in the number of kids taking to coding while still in school. The trend is fueled partly by parents who are comfortable with technology and end up exposing their children to it, as well as schools that have started teaching basic computer programming as early as the third grade.

For instance, Mehta's father, an avid coder, started teaching him some basics at home. 13-year-old Priyal Jain, on the other hand, learnt programming language Python at home when she was ten, and then enrolled in an android programming course at Acadgild, a Bengaluru-based technology education startup co-founded by her father Vikalp Jain and Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur Vinod Dham.

Recently , Jain teamed up with another Acadgild student, 12-yearold Prateek Mahesh to launch an android app, vPledge, at the end of an android training summer camp they attended. Mahesh learnt QBasic at school and then Python via YouTube tutorials before seeking out a programming course. A tabla player and blogger in his free time, Mahesh dreams of studying at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and starting his own tech company . Jain, on the other hand, wants to go to Stanford and eventually work at Google.

Interestingly, like Mahesh, many kids are entirely self-taught they pick up programming through online tutorials. Simran Singh discovered coding quite by accident when he was 13 and playing San Andreas, a popular video game. “I started coding servers that people could play the game on and taught myself programming through tutorials and articles online,“ said the 17-year-old Kanpur resident.He recently created an app that allows users to measure algae levels in water, something that won him a prize at Imagine Cup, a global student technology competition Microsoft hosts.

For their part, most technology companies have a slew of competi tions and programmes to get more children interested in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) globally. Last year IBM hosted Hackerupt in Bengaluru, what it said was India's first hackathon for high school kids. Directi runs CodeChef, an initiative aimed at getting more students interested in coding.

As for why giants like Apple, Microsoft and IBM are trotting out child coders at events, the answer is simple: marketing departments love child prodigies. “ As long as it's not being done just for publicity and these companies actually have programmes in place that will help develop their skills further, it is fine,“ says a former marketing head at an IT services firm.

Interestingly, when quizzed about their role models, most kids say that it is Mark Zuckerberg or Steve Jobs who inspire them. Sandy Carter, General Manager of Ecosystem Development and Social Business, IBM believes that there is a case for more home-grown role models.

http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/...g-the-Code-Becomes-Childs-Play-16062016001049
meh! not impressive!
I without any Tech Knowledge before shut down IRC servers.
ANYONE CAN HACK!
 
.
denuvo was cracked,but The Chinese cracker group blew the loophole out in open.Therefore new extra measures of Denuvo.
But you and me know,it will be cracked.


meh! not impressive!
I without any Tech Knowledge before shut down IRC servers.
ANYONE CAN HACK!
But it will take months and I don't have patience when there is a game like this
 
.
Still can't crack total war warhammer because it uses devuno crack

denuvo was cracked,but The Chinese cracker group blew the loophole out in open.Therefore new extra measures of Denuvo.
But you and me know,it will be cracked.


meh! not impressive!
I without any Tech Knowledge before shut down IRC servers.
ANYONE CAN HACK!

The article is not exactly talking about hacking or cracking copyright protected games and software. It is about increasing number of young students in India taking up coding as their passion and profession, and achieving new milestones. :)
 
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But it will take months and I don't have patience when there is a game like this
yes,they screwed up very good games, im still waiting for total war warhammer denuvo crack.But once they get the get the gist of it,the cracks will become more frequent.
The idea behind this tech is most game sales happen in the first month,so they want no cracked games in first month.Later on they don't care.
Can't wait to play as Orcs in Warhammer, you Humie gits, WAAAGGGH! :p:
The article is not exactly talking about hacking or cracking copyright protected games and software. It is about increasing number of young students in India taking up coding as their passion and profession, and achieving new milestones. :)
The companies are trying to get software coolies for their programs,Not some passion or anything involved in it,they just want workers.
Right now Denuvo is the hardest copyright software which is hard to crack.
 
.
The article is not exactly talking about hacking or cracking copyright protected games and software. It is about increasing number of young students in India taking up coding as their passion and profession, and achieving new milestones. :)
Yeah yeah we know

yes,they screwed up very good games, im still waiting for total war warhammer denuvo crack.But once they get the get the gist of it,the cracks will become more frequent.
The idea behind this tech is most game sales happen in the first month,so they want no cracked games in first month.Later on they don't care.
Can't wait to play as Orcs in Warhammer, you Humie gits, WAAAGGGH! :p:

The companies are trying to get software coolies for their programs,Not some passion or anything involved in it,they just want workers.
Right now Denuvo is the hardest copyright software which is hard to crack.
I will be playing empire the sons of sigmar;)
 
. .
I like the Orcs for their sense of Humor,brashness and straight forward go ahead and fight. When they reach the Waaghh! they are hard to defeat. :lol:

Did you play
Warhammer 40K: Battlefleet Gothic: Armada
its RTS in space with saceships.
Nah I am not into Sci FI fantasy but have you played coh and coh 2 great games rts wise and how is this game anyway I could try it and I want to play empire due to Demi gryps and great sword I will also play dwarfs because I like their lore
Hey I would appreciate it if you get the crack plz then tell me on the forum by tagging me
 
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The companies are trying to get software coolies for their programs,Not some passion or anything involved in it,they just want workers.

Ha, but when a million kids are doing it, we will surely get a few gems over the time.. :)
 
.
Nah I am not into Sci FI fantasy but have you played coh and coh 2 great games rts wise and how is this game anyway I could try it and I want to play empire due to Demi gryps and great sword I will also play dwarfs because I like their lore
Hey I would appreciate it if you get the crack plz then tell me on the forum by tagging me
Will let you know when the crack comes out.

Ha, but when a million kids are doing it, we will surely get a few gems over the time.. :)
Well i see human element decreasing in computer field in future.
 
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