Exploring childhood, technology & human possibility.
Father • Former EdTech founder • Chief Innovation Officer
Building a future where imagination matters.
Children arrive in this world overflowing with curiosity. They are natural scientists, makers, and storytellers. Our responsibility is not to standardize them. It is to create conditions where their ideas can unfold.
it’s message framing. Criticizing Lang is easy. Being specific about the nail bombs risks shifting attention to controversies around the mayor’s own circle: Oct. 7 praise, cheering torn hostage posters, and no clear condemnation of “globalize the intifada.” Vagueness keeps the narrative controlled.
@bradlander Brad, you stayed silent while the Mayor refused to condemn calls to 'Globalize the Intifada' against Jews. Now that a 'disturbing threat' has reached his own residence, do you see the connection? This is the intifada globalized. Different target same result.
@bradlander Pick one: Is he a self-funding billionaire or is he controlled by AIPAC donations? Using both just sounds like you’re searching for ways to signal to an antisemitic base while ignoring your own logic.
@bradlander Pick one: Is he a self-funding billionaire or is he controlled by AIPAC donations? Using both just sounds like you’re searching for ways to signal to an antisemitic base while ignoring your own logic.
It took Joyce 7 years to write Ulysses, one day to depict Dublin, and NotebookLM 5 minutes to reduce it to icons. Modernism has left the chat. yes I said yes I will Yes.
@CmsJaiJagat Turning ideas into clear digital layouts really does sharpen how you think. It’s cool how structure can open up space for more playful exploration too.
@sunnahtechlab Love seeing their confidence grow with those early digital skills. Little steps like this make room for them to try bolder things on their own.
@screenformation I hear the worry about screens causing all kinds of problems, but lumping every use together misses a lot. How kids use them seems to matter way more than the minutes.
@avoiceforchoice Yeah, it’s often the hands‑on play that gets pushed aside. I think the key is making sure screen time leads to making or imagining something, not replacing all the real‑world stuff.
@stocktonlibrary Love that you’re giving kids space to make their own games and animations. Hands‑on projects like this make the whole thing feel real and fun for them.
@avoiceforchoice I think that gap you’re naming is real, and those hands‑on moments matter. Screens can help too, but only when they lead kids back to making things in their own world.
@SatlokChannel I get the worry about AI shaping our thinking, but not all use leads to dependence. Intentional use can actually help people notice their own patterns instead of numbing them.