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You know, getting them both into art and coloring, there's so many different things you can put on there too. Well, I'm a pretty smart kid at six. And our kids, I wish we had this stuff back then, to be honest with you. You know, we're talking 1990 when my daughter was born at 96 for my son. And I wish I had some more of that back then to help them grow quicker. But, I mean, he's a computer programmer today, and he is paid very good money, and social worker. They feel comfortable with it, but I wish they would help develop a little buying. Yeah, that's my opinion of it. Back to you Kevin, KB0MAI. Yeah, I used to listen to Leo Laporte. I used to like his stuff. And yeah, he's right. I've heard him talk about it many times. And it's true where kids can develop the gift when it comes to programming, so being introduced to it. Yeah, because I remembered growing up, I had a couple of friends younger than me and yeah, they would figure out how to list and read command lines in programs and they would figure out, you know, how to just from that memorizing the command lines that you can use them and make other programs and as you list the programs so this is in the old days of basic programming if you had something to go on which would be the foundation of the program that you're reading then you can memorize and sketch the commands that are inside of it and come up with new programs and maybe even new commands so yeah it takes a developing brain to figure that out it's kind of like learning languages so that definitely is an aspect of it because even at the school now there's young gifted individuals and it starts from doing that all day because you could even read a program now on the web and just strip it apart and read everything that puts it together and it's a lot of fun and it's a way to kind of grow your brains and younger kids have that particular time where they're constantly learning and you can kind of tell because it starts out when they lie and they act like they're a lot smarter and a lot older, right until it gets to a point and you know this y'all raising kids know this it gets to a point where they're like I don't have to go to school look I can read and then of course you know they're lying but then you also know in another aspect that they're not lying where they've caught on to certain concepts and they know and they know how to deliver real fast, almost like that stupid kid in menaces society, right? In a way he was kind of brainy, I mean he was doing stuff there's no way anyone's gonna allow, but he was kind of brainy, right? He caught on to, I'm just kicking it, hey yo pass me a 40-0, pass me joint right so that there is an aspect right where they he saw like the older the older cats the OGs how they get down so he's trying to fit in and muscle in and be a part of it and lie and say that he's a part of it and that's a developing mind that's how of a developing mind works right where I say I think at five I would try to copycat that right like where you copycat that you know things and you copycat that you know everything right so those are the best stages of a brain I wish we could be in that stage forever when you're there it's amazing I mean that's how people pick up languages it's how people pick up music right people that are gifted in music start in that stage because you'll notice when you lose that when that window closes usually when you get to your teams and that window of learning closes it's hard to do a lot of things right like i don't know could i pick up an instrument now probably not maybe if you introduced it to me at five different stories right you know could i pick up a new language now probably not right so um those are the best those are the best times to learn best believe okay well what i'm gonna do I got two more stations left. I think these, I think we can sign for those. I'll certainly try. So, Darryl Ken. I think I still see him on the screen. So, Darryl Ken. Darryl Ken. Go.
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