In the earliest days of the App Store, a digital lightsaber app was all the rage. The app version can be used to order and watch video messages, with a Kids section containing an advent calendar, countdown and map radar to pinpoint Santa's home. The Portable North Pole website has quietly become a rather big deal for many parents, who are ordering bespoke video messages for their children from Father Christmas – often (I suspect) in a last-ditch attempt to encourage good behaviour in the final two weeks before Christmas. iPhone / iPad PNP - Portable North Pole 2013 (£2.49) Everything can be tagged and synchronised with other iOS devices and Macs, with plans for more (premium) features in the months ahead. It's a way to organise your images, including photos, screenshots and pictures you've seen on the web. More mobile image organising with Ember, launched by the developer behind slick to-do list app Clear. iPhone Ember - Capture, Organize and Share (Free) It's also capable of serving all this stuff up again when you return to the same place, as an aide-memoire. The app stores your photos and videos while pulling in your location data to show where they were taken, offering a choice of layouts to organise everything. iPad Heyday (Free)Īpple is throwing its App Store marketing weight behind Heyday this week: an app promising "effortless journaling". But its appeal is just as much about the educational games that go with them, aiming to help children learn as well as watch. Hopster is a UK-based rival that is well worth a look from parents, offering a catalogue of TV shows including Ben & Holly's Little Kingdom, Paddington Bear and 64 Zoo Lane. A growing number of companies have ambitions to be "the Netflix for kids", including Netflix itself.
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