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  • Geeky Robot-Building Dads Are the Best

    robot dadWho needs a dad who will teach you how to throw a curveball or play horsie when you have a dad like this? Geekdad, one of our very favorite resources for all things great, pointed us towards the interview with their hero of the week from Robot magazine. Nao Maru spends quality time with his kids by building robots. Kickass, award-winning robots. In fact, "In less that two years Maru and his two young sons went from complete novices to winning the ROBO-ONE 10 championship against the best humanoid robot builders Japan has to offer." Now that sounds like bonding, and thank god they didn't try to build a baby. Maru isn't one of those parents who takes over and just lets the kids hold the welder for a second. In the interview, he says about building one cool custom robot, "We wanted it to have an original character, but with some similarity to traditional anime robots. More than anything, it had to be something that would excite and inspire all of us, especially the boys, otherwise it wouldn't be worth doing."

    Excuse me, I think I have a nanoparticle in my eye... Yeah, I know, that wouldn't account for the watering. It's just the sweet geeky thing gets me right here, every time.  


  • Geeky Kids Get Good Camp

    geek campTech camps are on the rise, with 16 percent more computer camps now than in 2000. Many summer camps are offering science, robotics, game programming, and whole bunch of other subjects to appeal to the tape-on-the-glasses set. A number of people are concerned that with childhood obesity rates rising, too much summer time in front of a monitor might only exacerbate the inactivity problem, and recommend throwing a couple of weeks of general interest camp into the mix. There's also the concern that we as a society spend too much time plugged into various devices, and not enough time having real live human interactions.

    Some camps address these issues by offering field trips to places like NASA and behind the scenes at Disneyworld. And the director of marketing for one camp, Cybercamps, says, "'It's not just everyone sitting in front of the computer until the wee hours of the morning by themselves... We are getting them out of their bedrooms and basement and getting them to play in a social environment, which is a huge plus.'" I think that helping geeked-out kids interact with each other and introducing them to other kids with similar interests sounds like a great thing. If I remember correctly, summer camp often had a Lord of the Flies element to it that relegated the nerdy, unathletic children (like me) to ostracism and bunk sabotage. The only real danger I see here is that if you get that many geeky kids in one room with a bunch of state-of-the-art computer stuff, you could end up with the World Bank being hacked or something. But shoot, sign me up now for the sleepaway program, cuz I wanna learn 3-D modeling.


  • Gizmos For the Daddies

    geek dadWhat do dads and grads have in common, other than, er, rhyming? High-tech toys, of course! That's why the annual Father's Day and Graduation Buyers Guide was launched, with tons of techie stuff dad can play with while he hangs out with the little ones at the park. Many of these gifts are designed to introduce convenience through technology to everyday tasks, thereby necessitating an additional twenty minutes to come up with a shopping list, while papa fiddles with the stylus and pushes forty different buttons.

    Many of these little devices are pretty cool (make your iPod into a recording studio! Soon our iPods will be calling us "Dave"...) but the guide is a short on the kind of information many dads would need. Like, "Does this thing malfunction if half a cup of baby drool gets into it when my infant uses it for a teether?" Or, "Can it survive a fall from a play structure?" And especially, "Will my partner kill me for playing with this for three hours when I could be cleaning/cooking/taking care of the kids/bringing home a paycheck?" And I have to say, some of it just misses the psychology of the gift-giver. For example, the Ferrari 1000 notebook computer, while it may serve as a nice stand-in penis for those too geeky for a sports car, is a little too pricey for a Hallmark holiday. The gift guide counters that with "if you're looking for a distinctive small and light notebook that will definitely impress your dad or grad, you have to consider this great Acer product." Um, impress? We don't worry about impressing dads. Once they've heard the animal noises you make in labor or just spent some time with you after five weeks of sleep deprivation, that ship has sailed.



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