EMERYVILLE, Calif., June 25, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — LeapFrogEnterprises, Inc. (NYSE: LF), the leader in children's learning tablets, today announced the launch of the ultimate kids' learning tablet, ...
Educational toy maker LeapFrog has released the successor to its child-friendly LeapPad and LeapPad Explorer tablets: the LeapPad 2. While the overall design of the tablet looks very similar to its ...
Tablets for kids have come a long way in the past few years and are now much-improved over their low-resolution, slow and clunky predecessors. The LeapFrog LeapPad Platinum looks set to be one of the ...
Kids (and of course parents) take note, there is a whole new tablet in the offing in the form of LeapPad 2, which promises to take things forward from its hugely successful first gen version, the ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about global education, game-based learning, kids, & culture. Leapster LeapPad2 and the Fuhu Nabi2 are both tablets ...
It was over a year ago that we last crossed paths with LeapFrog’s LeapPad — a clever kid-friendly learning tablet that comes in under $100. Today, the second-generation LeapPad, or LeapPad2 as it were ...
Here is something that will make kids leap (read jump) for joy. Its the LeapPad – yet another tablet targeted at kids showing a growing trend among manufacturers to tap into a segment that is yet to ...
Leap Frog has announced that its LeapPad2 tablet is now available, and it's aimed squarely at your children. Leap Frog says that this is a significant upgrade over the original LeapPad, as it comes ...
The child-friendly LeapPad2 tablet is now available for $99.99, offering a selection of educational apps, games, and other content. The child-friendly LeapPad2 tablet is now available for $99.99, ...
For those with children in their lives, tablet use presents a dichotomy of sorts: on one hand, they're excellent for practicing writing, and many educational apps are available. One the other side, ...
The dummy-proof, interactive feel of tablets makes them a natural for kids. But letting your brat actually get his grubby, possibly poop-covered mitts on your delicate iPad? It’s probably for the best ...