I have faith that this won't be funded.
Kickstart Update: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1397300529/railsapp/post...
Source Code: https://github.com/tokaido/tokaidoapp
Just from yesterday, "Treehouse gets $7M to bring learn-to-code programs to high schools". https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5520726
See the $50 pledge: The price will jump to $100 after the Kickstarter, so sign up now!"
Kickstarter project guidelines: Kickstarter cannot be used to fund e-commerce, business, and social networking websites or apps. (http://www.kickstarter.com/help/guidelines#prohibited)
No matter if you throw the "education" label on it, it's still a paid membership site. A business website.
Even if it were allowed, it's miscategorized. The "Open Software" category is to fund open source projects, not education efforts about open source software. I don't see that any of the software that would come out of this project would be released as open source.
Edit: Since you responded to my other comment - I'm not claiming that what they're doing is allowed by the rules, just responding to that particular point.
How about something more ambitious? Anyone want to crowd fund a small satellite or lunar rover for the Google Lunar Prize?
Codeacademy and Udemy has Ruby classes to grasp enough knowledge and cost less than this.
I'm all for more resources, but I don't see how this is filling a market gap.
Plus, Ruby is big in the CM/operations/deployment world given the popularity of both Puppet and Chef.
Why's (poignant) Guide to Ruby: http://mislav.uniqpath.com/poignant-guide/