Greenpoint typed last night with Brooklyn’s Coding Workshop, wiring NYC’s spring at a Nassau loft. Dev Tariq Evans taught Python as 40 coded, a $15 class for script kids. It’s borough bytes—pure BK vibe, screens hot. A kid fixed a loop; a pro built a bot. ‘Brooklyn codes—this is it,’ Evans says, tapping keys. The room turned terminal.
The shop’s fresh—March 21’s start, it tripled since RSVPs, packing desks by 6 p.m. Evans, a Williamsburg coder; last night’s crowd hit max—lines flowed. A latecomer nabbed a rig; coffee buzzed—NYC grit glowed. Projects hit GitHub—code ruled. #BKCodingShop trended; Queens wants a script.
Some griped—’Too nerdy,’ sniped a newbie, dodging syntax. Wi-Fi lagged—fixed quick; hacks held. A rival’s pitching a Bushwick hack, splitting keyboards. Still, 50 stayed—bits reigned. Greenpoint’s never hacked so bold.
Evans hints at a hackathon, maybe a park if spring bites. ‘NYC’s tech—this grows it,’ he says, packing drives. The shop’s a Brooklyn win—grit meets grid. It’s a code rush; join the next. Bring a laptop—bugs call.