We would like to thank the following people for their contributions to MicroBlocks:
Who | Contribution |
---|---|
Constantine Rotkevich | MicroBlocks bunny logo |
Mozilla Open Source Support | Grant to improve MicroBlocks support for the WebThings Gateway |
Gilles Mateu, David Perrenoud |
French translation |
Gilles Mateu | Initial experimental support for persistence in ESP32 |
Marius Unsel, Jadga Hügle |
German translation |
Cobie van de Ven, Peter Mathijssen |
Dutch translation |
Turgut Güneysu | (now a team member) Turkish translation, Helicopter game, countless hours of careful testing, the whole reference manual and lots of other outstanding content for this Wiki. |
Mel Azzi | Arabic translation and support for RTL languages |
Ozoda Ismailova | Uzbek translation |
Vladimir Zhdanov | Russian translation |
Nargiza Kholmatova | Updates to the Uzbek and Russian translations |
Miguel Bouzada | Galician translation |
José García Yeste | Several optimizations and bug fixes for the ED1 board, PWM and servo support for ESP32 boards, libraries for the TCS34725 color sensor, the BMX280 barometric pressure sensor, the RC522 RFID sensor, the SGP30 air quality sensor, the PAJ7620 gesture sensor, the VL6180x and VL53L0X distance sensors, and libraries for displaying BMP image files and playing WAV sound files |
Víctor Casado | CCS811 air quality sensor library |
Joan Guillén, Josep Ferràndiz |
Ultrasound distance sensor library |
Simon Mong | Simplified Mandarin Chinese translation |
Tom Lauwers | Hummingbird:bit and Finch libraries, and Dutch translation |
Paul Stoffregen | Support for persistence on the Teensy 3.2, 4.0 and 4.1 boards |
Filipe Oliveira Gomes | Portuguese translation |
Fernando S. Pacheco | Brazilian Portuguese translation |
Ayachika Kitazaki | Japanese translation |
Nikos Ioannou | Greek translation |
Consejería de Educación de Cantabria | Spanish translation of all activity cards |
Luis Mateos | MCP4725 DAC library |
Julia Reiter | LEGO EV3 library |
A huge thank you to Jen Lavalle, K-5 technology teacher and part-time MicroBlocks team member from 2017 to 2020. Jen helped lead the very first MicroBlocks workshop and the first Pathfinders Institute MicroBlocks class for teachers. She tested early versions of MicroBlocks with her students, providing feedback and suggestions that made it easier and more fun to use. Jen also designed the highly successful Activity Card format and created sets of cards for the micro:bit and the Circuit Playground express that we are still using.