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Wireless 'Rabbit' To Monitor Your Child's Web Use

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  • Wireless 'Rabbit' To Monitor Your Child's Web Use

    WIRELESS 'RABBIT' TO MONITOR YOUR CHILD'S WEB USE

    Herald.ie
    July 18 2008
    Ireland


    New technology will enable parents to monitor their children's use
    of the internet from other parts of the house.

    The adults can be alerted of their kids' activity by getting updates
    on a wireless rabbit shaped device away from the computer.

    Messages about status updates on social networking sites would appear
    in text format on the 'Nabaztag' (Armenian for rabbit) device.

    The technology, which is not on the market, is being developed by
    one student on a summer IT programme between DCU and UCD.

    The programme is designed to help greater communication between
    parents who are often less computer literate and their kids who are
    joined up to everything from Bebo, to MySpace and Facebook.

    UCD lecturer Aaron Quigley said that the technology that is being
    developed by University of Texas student Poornima Hanumara can be
    used by parents to monitor children's PC use. "The main purpose for
    all of these projects is social connection not just for monitoring."

    Professor Quigley said the programme could also make the rabbit
    glow a particular colour to alert of danger if a child goes onto a
    particular site.

    DCU Professor Gabriel-Miro Muntean said, "commodity is there, we just
    designed a way to remotely control it".

    He said that the ears can also move on the rabbit device which could
    also be programmed to send out another message.

    "This is what the technology allows you to do and to link this with
    what a child is doing is interesting," he said.

    The project called 'Connecting families by sharing the minutiae of
    their lives' is part of Online Dublin Computer Science Summer School
    (ODCSSS) -- a 12 week research internship that attracts international
    and local IT students to DCU and UCD.

    This is the fifth year of the project and this year several of the
    projects could be adapted to be used for child safety.

    At the end of the 12 weeks the project could be taken by a company
    and adapted into a product.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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