While
some tech parents assign limits based on time, others are much stricter about
what their children are allowed to do with screens.Credit Jonathan
Nackstrand/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
When Steve Jobs was running Apple,
he was known to call journalists to either pat them on the back for a recent
article or, more often than not, explain how they got it wrong. I was on the
receiving end of a few of those calls.
But nothing shocked me more than something Mr. Jobs said to me in late 2010
after he had finished chewing me out for something I had written about an iPad
shortcoming.
“So,
your kids must love the iPad?” I asked Mr. Jobs, trying to change the subject.
The company’s first tablet was just hitting the shelves. “They haven’t used
it,” he told me. “We limit how much technology our kids use at home.”
I’m
sure I responded with a gasp and dumbfounded silence. I had imagined the Jobs’s
household was like a nerd’s paradise: that the walls were giant touch screens,
the dining table was made from tiles of iPads and that iPods were handed out to
guests like chocolates on a pillow.
No comments:
Post a Comment