What To Load On a 4-Year-Old's Netbook?
nostrodecus writes "I have a nephew who is very young, but who has the techie gene — he found the Gruffalo on YouTube before anyone knew he could spell. Now he's almost 4, and I was thinking of giving him my netbook (Acer running XP), which I hardly use any more. So, of course, I will be deleting all the porn, but what should I load up on it? Are there tools/apps that I can load up on it to protect it and him from things he shouldn't see until college? Also, what apps or games could I load on it that a 4-year-old will get some use out of?"
Regardless of what you install there's no guaranteed way to stop your kid from stumbling upon boobs on the internet. Plus who's to say it's something to worry about at all. They certainly didn't traumatize me.
Why in God's name would you give a computer to a 4-year-old? Give him a damn baseball or something, the last thing he needs in his formative years is to vegetate in front of a screen.
Brett
LOGO
If he really has the techie gene, he will seriously best his sister's crappy pen-and-paper Spirograph!
Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
A way to turn it off and go outside to play.
If you're really going to give a young kid a netbook... with an internet connection then block ALL websites and connections, except ones which you trust them seeing. Or don't give them internet access at all. I wouldn't, not at that age.
When I was 4 I used to love playing around with a computer, I didn't have educational games or anything, I just to just play lemmings, or mess around with a word processor or something. Try to let the kid get used to using a computer at a young age for normal tasks.
If you really feel adventurous, give him a Pascal IDE or something.
Between PBS Kids, Club Penguin, et al, there is really no need to install or buy anything except for Flash. By the time he outgrows these games, it will be years down the road and he'll be able to figure out what to do next.
Say what you will about Flash, but there is a lot of pretty good content for kids out there.
There aint no pancake so thin it doesn't have two sides.
You could just as easily load up Linux instead for a copy costing $0.
If your kid is visiting websites which could give him viruses, then you really need to keep an eye on him.
I'm going to agree.
...
It keeps him occupied for hours at a stretch. It really frees me up to go shopping and other things that would have been tough with him along.
I sincerely hope you're fucking joking.
Get your 4 year old outside and away from computers for at least a little while longer, my kids cannot even contemplate getting on a bicycle and riding all over town like we did as kids, most of the time on a beautiful day in Florida they are inside surfing the web, playing computer games or texting on their cell phones. Just saying...
I teach Technology in an elementary school and the only 3 programs I install on computers (besides my enforced MS Office Install) are Tux Paint [http://www.tuxpaint.org/download/] (don't forget the stamps!), Scratch [http://scratch.mit.edu/], and Google Earth. Just make sure you have tolerance for sound with Tux Paint and Scratch. Tux Paint will end up with a never ending cacaphony of flushing toilets and frogs, and Scratch couldleave someone wondering why you hear a looped cat meowing with drums in the background. Google Earth needs no explanation.
People here are all talk. Keyboard warriors.
In real life, they are pussies and won't do a goddamned thing about it.
Give him some toys and send him outside where he belongs! Kids these days have no imagination because they have technology shoved in their face from the time they can grab it.
now he wont learn anything. And not even the obvious things one learns through childhood like playing and socializing but the things you dont really realise. For example i had an older brother and we grew up in a less than affluent household. One thing I had to learn, and i mean had to, was sharing. Whatever we had, we had one of, a video game, a computer etc and we would be pissed about it but eventually it was alright. And right now im pretty thankful of it, because it taught me
1. respect other peoples feelings and needs
2. you cant have everything you ask for
Theres always time to learn a computer, theres always time to sit in a darkened room and play video games all day but give the kid a chance yes? give him a simple toy (builds imagination creativity etc) or just a social toy (checkers set?). I've seen young kids with so and so electronic device stuck to their hand. And i've always hated the way they cant take their eyes off it.
My daughter is four and a half and I have an old work laptop built up for her. She's got some good mousing skills and scored an OCD ranking in one World of Goo level while I was doing the washing up.
Anyway....I've scoured around trying to find good content and have a good list. Steer clear of all the Disney and other commerical stuff, that stuff will rot their brains. It's also badly coded and mainly a vehicle to advertise to the kids.
This is what I have installed on her laptop. They are all links to flash sites as almost all good kids stuff is on-line now. Anything that you have to install probably lists Windows ME as the system requirement on the box:
1) Poisson Rouge (http://www.poissonrouge.com/) - This is a French/English flash site with has no instructions and just encourages the child to explore the pages and work out what to do. It's probably the best site on-line for the 3-5 age group.
2) Boowah & Kwala (http://boowakwala.uptoten.com/) - This is another French/English site originally made by a husband and wife for their daughter and has grown from there. It's more instructional in its activities, but has an enormous amount of content delivered in a great way. The two main characters (see the names) are voiced by the parents and are very funny.
3) Sesame Street (http://www.sesamestreet.org/) - This one is a no-brainer...they have a great variety of games for different ages.
4) StarFall (http://www.starfall.com/) – A reading site that runs from letter recognition all the way to full reading. It’s got some very fun stuff in it.
5) WordWorld (http://pbskids.org/wordworld/index_flash.html) – A very rich and interactive reading site with lots of fun characters made out of letters.
Enjoy!