jwcolby
jwcolby at colbyconsulting.com
Mon Apr 11 15:25:26 CDT 2011
My daughter Allie will turn 8 in June. She has a genetic duplication meaning that she has 2 copies of a section of one gene. Bad news, it causes low intellectual functioning - IQ ~ 70, speech apraxia, general muscle planning problems etc. But Allie knows how to use the computer. She cannot type (or read very well yet) but she can play her games, gets on YouTube and watches videos, she can navigate the interface for the Windows 7 video center etc. Her teachers are amazed at her computer skills. Her favorite thing in all the world is to do the scanning of our stuff at checkout at the grocery store. :) She has most of the checkers wrapped around her finger. ;) Robbie OTOH is a marginally gifted little guy, very bright. A little scientist / engineer, loves anything in that area of knowledge. With luck he will be a doctor and support me in my old age. ;) John W. Colby www.ColbyConsulting.com On 4/11/2011 3:58 PM, Jim Lawrence wrote: > My daughters have all grown up with computers. From childhood, their rooms > have been wired for computers...coax cable and all. My oldest daughter > learned to type on the keyboard before she could talk. She would sit in my > lap and enter the keys as I called them out. She could start up the > Commodore 64 and load games from memory. > > My youngest daughter made her first web site when she was ten, a Sailor-moon > site. ;-) At that time she used notepad to build her site and she knew more > about web sites and HTML coding than I did. > > Today, both my daughters are married or in a long term relationship with > programmers (both with a least one degree in computer science) and they all > work in the business; one in computer graphic designer (and fashion design) > and two in animation and one as an application developer but if pushed the > girls are both pretty good programmers (At the age of 15 my oldest daughter > was short-listed in a job competition and the company sent her their whole > software line as a consolation...It was Blizzard software with Warcraft > etc.) > > The one I feel sorry for is my wife Maria who totally non-computer literate > and has to listen to rest of the family talk shop and coding etc. at ever > family gathering. > > I really hope your wife likes computers. ;-) > > Jim