What’s That Thing She’s Sitting On?

Push Bike
I got a few questions about the bike that my daughter is riding in this picture. It’s generally called a “push bike” or a “balance bike”. The concept behind it is explained pretty well in an article by Josefine Köhn-Haskins, Push Bikes and Balance Bikes for Children. And there’s other good information by Bonnie Rochman in Bye-Bye, Training Wheels. Hello, Balance Bikes.

Josefine explains the general idea:

Starting a child on a balance bike makes it easy for him to learn riding a pedal bike. Most kids will be ready by the age of five or even four.

We’ll see how it goes. Neil has started learning using training wheels and it’s taking him a while. But we might have started him a year too early also. I took his training wheels off last Saturday.

Josefine also mentions this:

Children can start using a balance bike as early as age two. But do not expect them to sit on the bike and just race off.

Um, no. We have a little daredevil girl.

These bikes can really speed up, especially downhill. And most youngsters discover the fun of rolling downhill with their feet up pretty fast.

For Gillian that took all of 2 minutes. She fell off her push bike several times, which is not the usual course of action for these things. But she always got back on. To go back to the top of the hill again.

sigh

Hats Off To Molly For Admitting This

Molly Wood
Molly Wood has always been one of the most negative tech journalists out there when it comes to Apple products. Now she seems to have done a complete turnaround, as explained in Why Apple Is Winning. She nails it here:

Apple’s killer strength, as everyone knows, is its laser-like focus on “insanely great” products, coupled with its ability to build an iron-clad ecosystem that just keeps selling more Apple products. And in a time when tech is simultaneously getting more pervasive and more complicated, Apple’s focus on simplicity and usability has never been more relevant. “It just works” is all I, at least, have time for when it comes to my tech.

And this (emphasis mine) is exactly what I have been saying is the real key to why it makes sense for your average Joe to go with Apple:

But even worse than fragmentation is the fact that Android is still more complicated, in the same way that Windows is, to operate and troubleshoot. If something goes wrong with your iPhone, you take it to the Apple store, or, at least, forum posters are all talking about the exact same hardware, OS version, and most likely, problem.

TV Makes Me Feel Inadequate

When I write code to do a search it looks something like this:

Very Dull

When computer guys on TV do a search it looks something like this:

Huge Screen!