Beeb@30 – Thirty years of the BBC Micro and Computer Literacy Project
The Computer Literacy Project was a BBC-led initiative to improve computing education in Britain. A new series entitled The Computer Programme was planned for 1982, and the corporation wanted their own machine to accompany it.
A number of British computing firms were approached to produce a machine to the BBC’s own specification. The contract was awarded to Acorn Computers, whose own Atom replacement machine, the Proton, was adapted to satisfy the criteria.
The resulting BBC Micro became the machine of choice for schools up and down the country, backed by the then Conservative government’s own desire to make Britain lead the world in computer education.
Thirty years on, the BBC Micro is fondly remembered as being the computer that started a generation of careers in IT. It also begs the question – what did the Computer Literacy Project achieve, and how does it compare to how computing is taught now?
Beeb@30 will be a celebration with a twist, with the people who made it happen just over thirty years ago.
For more information and how to order tickets, please visit this page.

That’s not how I remember the BBC. It was the computer that really wet kids had because their mummy and daddy were minted. The electron was the computer less rich kids got. The Speccy and the C64 was the general computer of choice. I knew 2 kids with Atari 800XL’s, and they were kind of outcasts. All of those computers, even the Speccy, had better games. No one cared about the rest really.
It was also horribly out of date by the time I left school. I mean I left school in 1989/1990 and by that time the BBC was a total joke. I went to Sixth Form College and they had Archies (A3xx and A4xx) and I just loved those and defended them like crazy against all the kids with ST’s and Amigas, but the BBC was artificially propped up by the lack of willingness to invest in computers.