Electronic Toys
Fisher-Price Kid-Tough Digital Camera - Blue
(Toy) Fisher-Price
Features easy and child friendly controls
Features: 1.44 TFT colored screen, Inbuilt memory that stores over 1000+picures, 0.3 mega pixel imager, 4x digital zoom
Kid-Tough and built to survive drop, after drop, after drop
Enhanced imager for good low light performance
Add fun special effects with downloadable software
Price:
$39.99
$36.39
Customer Reviews:
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Now every kid wants one
A cousin of mine had one and loved it, so I bought one for my 3-year-old son. He loves it. Since then, several other cousins, after seeing ours being used, have bought them. It's catchy.I just happened to throw it in, when we went to a wedding reception and that kept my son entertained the... -
My Canon Rebel thanks you, Amazon
I love photography, so my son has acquired that love! Unfortunately, that meant he was always trying to "use" my camera and it took far more abuse than I preferred. Enter the Kid-Tough Camera for his 3rd birthday, and problem solved! He LOVES being able to take pictures everywhere he goes...
Answers
Ive seen the fisher price camera for boys.. but I bought that one for a younger cousin and felt my nephew was too old for the bulky camera..I havent gotten any good reviews about the disney camera phones...Just some insight with this would be...
Carefully check the storage/memory capabilities. DD had received a kids one as a Christmas gift and brought it w/ her on vaction to Disney. Before we coudl download the pictures, we had to replace the batteries.
Fisher Price Kid Tough Digital Camera Woofits review
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If you know of a better "child" proof camera that is worth getting for a two and a half year old boy, let me know. I am nervous about the quality of pictures and the battery usage of the Fisher Price one.
I found these ones that take quality photos which can be printed into prints (which you could do with your son at the development places) of 4x6.
Polaroid Pixie 3.0MP Kids Digital Camera
http://www.amazon.com/Polaroid-3%252e0MP -Digital-Camera-CKA%252d00301S/dp/B000SA
Price:
$39.99
$39.00
Features easy and child friendly controls
Enhanced imager for good low light performance
Add fun special effects with downloadable software
Kid-Tough and built to survive drop, after drop, after drop
Features: 1.44 TFT colored screen, Inbuilt memory that stores over 1000+picures, 0.3 mega pixel imager, 4x digital zoom
Combining the best of the award-winning magazine Rad Dad and the Daddy Dialectic blog, this compilation features the best essays written for fathers by a multitude of dads from different walks of life. Bestselling authors, writers, musicians, and others collaborate on this collection that focuses on some of the modern complexities of fatherhood. Touching on topics such as the brutalities, beauties, and politics of the birth experience; the challenges of parenting on an equal basis with mothers; the tests faced by transgendered and gay fathers; the emotions of sperm donation; and parental confrontations with war, violence, racism, and incarceration, this anthology leaves no stone unturned in the discussion of being a dad. Contributors include: Steve Almond, Jack Amoureux, Mike Araujo, Mark Andersen, Jeff Chang, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Jeff Conant, Jason Denzin, Cory Doctorow, Craig Elliott, Chip Gagnon, Keith Hennessy, David L. Hoyt, Simon Knapus,...
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"The New Person"
“The New Person” (Season 1, episode 10; originally aired 8/5/2001)
Jon Hanley has had countless victims. He punches his time card in the customer-service phone banks of what sounds like a shoddy retailer of home furnishings. The inane bureaucracy of the place has long since stultified his mind, so he handles his customers’ problems with a mix of bemusement and condescension. How many people have slammed the phone down in frustration with this man?
But what’s worse is that when he’s home from work, he tells his wife all about it. As he prattles on at the breakfast table, she suffers more than any of the hapless callers who get her husband on the other end of the line. At least they can hang up.
In the past, he was probably an interesting man. Although his words are dull—“I can’t do anything unless you give me an order number!”—his voice lilts with the rhythms of a guy who once knew how to tell an amusing anecdote. But now it’s just an endless spew of noise. His wife calmly flips over his scrambled eggs in a cast-iron frying pan. He gets the pan. She eats the eggs. Jonathan Arthur Hanley, 1946-2001.


