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Note to Self

Screens and Kids: Do Techies Have Different Rules than the Rest of Us?

Note to Self

WNYC Studios

Self-improvement, Tech, Note, Npr, Education, Public, Wnyc, Manoush, York, To, New, Self, Radio, Business, Technology, Relationships, City, Society & Culture, Zomorodi, Newtechcity

4.72.7K Ratings

🗓️ 8 October 2014

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In a world of screens, parents face some tough questions: To limit or not to limit? By how much and when? How different is Candy Crush from Codeacademy? And what is all the new tech doing to our children?

In this episode, we dive into the conundrum with the techies themselves -- the parents who code the apps and create the devices on your desk or in your pocket. We want to find out if they know something the rest of us civilians don’t.

We’ll hear from Sameer Ajmani, a Google software engineer, who deployed some evidence-based parenting and experimented with screen time extremes for his seven year-old. It didn’t go so well as you might imagine, but the lessons were probably worth it.

“The reality is that [tech execs] actually have a better understanding of where tech can go wrong than most non-tech parents do,” Nick Bilton.

Nick Bilton, tech columnist for the The New York Times, joins Manoush to swap stories after informally surveying tech execs in Silicon Valley about their family rules. It seems the parents most entrenched in the tech world are the ones most weary of what they’ve created.

This episode will leave you thinking about your own house rules, whether or not you have kids. If you’ve figured it out, even just a little bit, we’d love to hear from you in the comment section below.

If you like this episode, why not subscribe on iTunes here, or on Stitcher, TuneIn, I Heart Radio, or anywhere else using our RSS feed. It only takes a few clicks and helps us a bunch. Thanks.

Resources mentioned in this episode: Heard in this episode:
    “Anything that you do in excess is probably not good for you,” Nick Bilton. “No parents in history have ever had to cope with the unprecedented convergence of a ubiquitous sophisticated alluring habit-forming screen technology and unfettered unregulated advertising," Susan Linn, founder of The Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood. “Addiction in the 60s was about sex, drugs, and rock n' roll. The response in the 80s was safe sex education, say no to drugs, and the commoditization of popular music. This generation, the addictions are games, social media, and upbuzzclickbaitworthy articles. What's the response?” Sameer Ajmani, parent and programmer.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello friend, this is an episode of Note to Self, but from when we used to be called New Tech City.

0:07.0

Same good content, just the old name. Enjoy.

0:13.0

This is WNYC's New Tech City, the podcast where digital gets personal. I'm your host, Manouche Summerodi.

0:22.0

What do you want?

0:29.0

That's two year old Ashland.

0:35.0

Her dad, Daniel Brooks, posted her iPad temper tantrum on YouTube.

0:42.0

He got a lot of nasty comments for giving the toddler an iPad in the first place.

0:50.0

And a few more nasty comments for filming the tantrum with his iPhone and then showing it to all of us on the internet.

0:56.0

When technology and parenting meet, it can be more like a collision.

1:03.0

We're figuring it out as we go along, but hopefully this week's episode will help, just a little bit.

1:10.0

It's an inside look into how the techies parent, how those people who are making all the iPads the gadgets,

1:18.0

the ones writing all the code for these addictive games, designing the must-have app that we tap all day long.

1:25.0

How do they deal with technology at home, with their families?

1:30.0

Do they know something that we regular folks don't?

1:34.0

Maybe they've discovered the secret just right balance.

1:38.0

On today's show, our friend, New York Times Tech columnist Nick built-in, gives us a roundup of how Silicon Valley folks manage screens and their kids.

1:47.0

They said, how do you kids like the iPad? And he's barked at me while they don't. We limit tech in our house.

1:54.0

But before we get to Nick, I want to tell you about my own chat with some techie parents.

2:00.0

Not in Silicon Valley, but the other smug, self-annoying center of the hip and creative universe. Brooklyn.

2:08.0

I wanted to see a techie parent in action for myself.

2:13.0

So a friend put me in touch with Samir Ajman.

2:18.0

Samir has a PhD in computer science from MIT. He's been a software engineer at Google for over a decade. Consider him the logical thinker of the family.

...

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