Keep your toddler from stuffing a peanut butter sandwich into your DVD player with a few kid-proofing home theater system tips from Wired's How-To Wiki. They recommend using an enclosed cabinet for your gear, stowing power cords as out of reach as possible, and actually using the safety strap to anchor that big TV to the table top.
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It's going to be a few years before your toddler's LiveJournaling, but for now you can share the latest baby news and developments with webapp TotSpot. TotSpot incorporates features of many popular social media sites to create a virtual baby book for parents to catalog their child's growth. With TotSpot you can upload photos and video, and keep a journal about your child that tracks new firsts (first words, first steps, first time not terrified by the animatronic stegosaurus at the local water park, etc.) and new favorite things. You can input data on growth and development to create a virtual growth chart. Totspot even has a Twitter-esque micro blogging feature for quick and easy updates about what you and the baby are doing.
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While YouTube may be a great place to answer your toddler's requests to see video of a baby panda, there is also tons of content more risqué than adorable baby animals. Video site Totlol offers the good stuff from YouTube to your kids without the rest. Designed by a British software developer and father of two, Totlol is a child-friendly frontend to YouTube, with clips fit for kids from the age of six months old to six years old. Videos range from the comically absurd such as Elmo and Grover singing the Numa Numa song, to the more serious, such as a reading of The Giving Tree by children's author Shel Silverstein. Totlol [via Learning My Way Through]
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