 h a l f b a k e r y Tip your server.
idea:
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, best, random
meta:
news, help, about, links, report a problem
account:
Browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
or Create a new account.
|
|
| Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
| |
Conceptually good, as long as it's not adult-proof. I locked my handphone once. I had to throw it away. |
|
| |
Y'know, my buddy lets his son use the remote as a toy phone. It's cheaper than a phone, especially when dialing Fiji and the child knows no difference. |
|
| |
Take the batteries out. Or tie the kid's thumbs together. |
|
| |
You can get small cable ties from radio-shack. A determined kid can probably chew through these, so you need to keep his hands behind his back. |
|
| |
Simply build some fingerprinting or retina scanning device into the remote. |
|
| |
Shelves are good. Keep things on shelves. Shelves. |
|
| |
//Keep things on shelves// Such as the kids? |
|
| |
No, they stay in the cupboards, keeping the shelf-space free for knick-knacks and bric-a-brac. |
|
| |
Teach your kids what they can and can't touch. Our toddlers never go delving into cupboards or drawers, never touch remote control units, and even knock on doors before they enter rooms. |
|
| |
It's pretty easy, just don''t treat them as babies. They are eager to please, and very proud of themselves when they are praised for getting it right. |
|
| |
Adapt the "Magna-Trigger" saftey system to television remotes? |
|
| |
Our three year old knows exactly which buttons to press on which remote to get what she wants. She also knows that if she presses the wrong buttons the TV becomes "broken" and she can't watch what she wants. She also knows to put the remote out of the baby's reach otherwise ditto. IOW, what [UB] said. |
|
| |