My eldest is four, so I don't really have a problem yet but I think I'll
install ManicTime (tracks what apps you use and what pages you visit,
mainly for freelancers to bill per hour) and review it every so often.

Beyond that, I'll try to be online with them.  I'm doing that now with the
excellent if dated flash games on the BBC's cbeebies site.
On Feb 4, 2013 11:53 AM, "Josh Berry" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have to confess that this is one area where Amazon's offering has really
> taken me by surprise.  The Freetime app on their Kindle Fire HD line is
> quite impressive.  Has a monthly cost, but considering the amount of apps
> that the kids have already gotten access to, I suspect it will be a while
> before that cost worries me.
>
> I don't know of any similar offering on other platforms, at the moment.
> And my kids are all rather harsh laptops (which is currently all we have,
> I'm looking at a raspberry pi board), so this is the only computing access
> they get at the moment.
>
> There is a good segment in the current Make magazine that has some
> suggestions on software to get folks started tinkering.  In fact, it looks
> like the entire kids & family section of their site is worth a look on this
> category (Though, does look higher on the craft side, but I'm not sure that
> is a negative).  http://blog.makezine.com/category/home/kids-family/
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 8:57 AM, Rakesh <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Hi guys,
>>
>> I know some of you have kids and was wondering what you do to keep them
>> safe online?
>>
>> I've found that its a bit hit and miss myself:
>>
>> 1. iPads not too bad as the Restrictions settings (password enabled) is
>> good enough to block Safari and Youtube. The main issue is remembering to
>> turn it on again after I've disabled it.
>>
>> 2. Phones - I've had to get really strict and just ban my son (who's
>> five) from using my phone at all. Annoyingly, my daughter (who is 18
>> months) like to press the Emergency Call option which doesn't need
>> unlocking on my Android phone.
>>
>> 3. Windows XP - this is my wife's old work laptop that is now my son's to
>> use for some websites. I have disabled youtube by manipulating the hosts
>> file. For other sites I have to rely on the content advisor inside the
>> Windows settings. Not sure how good that is since my son still manages to
>> find flash-based websites to play games. Restricting to a specific site is
>> not always easy. I found an article detailing how to use the proxy settings
>> set to an invalid value (to completely disable all sites) then selectively
>> provide exceptions. Thing is, the site I gave him access to makes calls to
>> toher domains for images and CSS which then have to be added to the
>> exception list. Pain!!!
>>
>> Any thoughts guys?
>>
>> Rakesh
>>
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