What kind of parent are you if you don’t plunk down $80 for one of these OSMO things right now? I just got one. Amazon reviewers gave it an impressive 4.8/5 stars and it comes with 4 apps. The latest, ...
PALO ALTO, Calif. (KGO) -- The Bay Area is home to a lot of entrepreneurs. But making the leap from an idea to a company can be a big challenge. One local success story involves a product that could ...
The simple but brilliant iPad accessory known as Osmo, which takes real-world objects and movements and transforms them into onscreen gameplay, has a new trick up its sleeve. Its new "Masterpiece" app ...
Osmo is a game system for iPad that uses the tablet’s camera to interact with real-world objects like puzzle pieces or drawings (buy the starter kit for $69). There are several Osmo apps, spanning ...
A new iPad app may very well birth the next generation of Picassos and Jackson Pollocks and, at the same time, illustrate how technology can be a powerful educational tool when it comes to creating ...
Osmo is turning out to be wonderfully creative at making apps for children that redefine the meaning of games and play. After a big debut last year, today the Silicon Valley startup is proving that ...
Osmo and Disney are unveiling Super Studio Frozen 2, a drawing app that uses artificial intelligence and Disney characters. Read More ...
iPad innovator Osmo unveils Masterpiece for its iOS reflective peripheral to inspire real art work from scanned, traced and found materials. If you've not come across it yet, Osmo is a simple lozenge ...
When kids play with iPads, parents aren’t happy because they see the youngsters disengaging from the rest of the world. As a parent, Pramod Sharma shared that view, and he did something about it.
Osmo, a tech company focused on children and learning, got its name from the word awesome. And that may well be how you feel about yourself after you let their new app, Masterpiece, turn you into an ...
This embedded content failed to load. I love coding. I love Lego. I think we should teach kids how to code, if they want to learn. I think the only thing you should ever buy for your children is food ...
A few years ago, a story surfaced about how the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs wouldn’t let his children use iPads. Like so many other surprising celebrity parenting stories, the story quickly went viral.
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