Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

Last time I checked, a kid in a car can't download an assignment they forgot to bring, check their grades, or submit an assignment electronically, to a school computer when away from school at a friends house, a second parents house, or on a trip a family trip, without a mobile device.

Many people are more mobile now.

And schools are increasingly supporting remote access and activities. It is especially fantastic for multi-home families where whatever a kids needs is often somewhere else.

> Somehow we survived.

This phrase is used a lot, but I seldom find it persuasive.

We survived without tools that didn't exist in large part because they didn't exist for other people too.

But when they arrive, and become popular, they change the balance of other things, whether any individual wants them to or not. Sometimes they are so popular and useful, they raise the baseline of what people need.




Literally all of the examples you gave to support the idea that children need uninterrupted Internet access would be solved with a little bit of advance planning instead. Obviously your mind is made up, but that's not convincing at all.


You seem to be trivializing experiences I shared without providing a basis. Please correct me if I am wrong.

> would be solved with a little bit of advance planning instead

We needed more planning, because ...? I am lost as to your criteria here.

We solved many complex family issues with smart phones, which the kids used responsibly, largely due to lots of planning of healthy activities and quality use of time.

The kids also competently leveraged their phones for other valuable benefits, and it was especially nice for me to be able to contact them at any random point (outside of classes), without having to know where they were. They are my kids - being electronically present, via voice, text, pics, gaming apps, etc., when I was not able to be physically present, meant a great deal.

> Obviously your mind is made up

My "mind is made up" because ...? What is your basis here?

Throwing around an empty (potentially projecting) accusation, does not make it true.

For 25 years and going, we have adjusted our parenting roles by trying new things, seeing what works, seeing what stops working, and adjusting. "Making up our minds" would not be a useful means or goal.




Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: