A new way of parental control
-
@Minion-Queen said:
@DustinB3403 said:
@Minion-Queen wouldn't a centrally managed Content Filter / Time-Tracker be more fluid?
Everything is managed at your Internet, rather than at the device.
As a parent this feels like you are being sneaky about doing it. I wanted my kid to know and be aware that there are lines that he wasn't allowed to cross.
But how do you catch him if he crosses them? ... or did you -- since he's an adult and all that now, lol.
-
Oh I don't mean, just stop the website or video etc from loading.
But much like DansGaurdian clearly label it as off-limits when such a site is attempted to be accessed.
-
@Minion-Queen said:
As a parent this feels like you are being sneaky about doing it. I wanted my kid to know and be aware that there are lines that he wasn't allowed to cross.
I like the time management part of it more, I think. For me, that is much harder to manage than the content.
-
CAN MY KIDS TURN THE CIRCLE DEVICE OFF?
It is possible to turn off Circle, but we designed it with enterprising kids in mind.LOL.
-
@Dashrender said:
This appears to be a hardware and software solution, unless the software absolutely doesn't need the hardware, I'm not sure how you could trial this software?
It seems to be hardware only.
I'm wondering how this thing works, exactly.
How does the traffic get re-routed to it?
-
How does it work when off? And if it works when off, why not just do that instead of having the device?
-
Ah, this is how they do it:
-
Built with teens in mind.
Worried about Circle being unplugged? Not to worry. Circle has a battery. Couldn’t they just remove it from the home? Or just plain turn it off? Not without you getting a notification right away. As you can see, we’ve got you covered parents. -
Only works with Apple devices... lol
-
@DustinB3403 said:
Only works with Apple devices... lol
I think it works with any device, but can only be configured on iOS.
-
@DustinB3403 said:
Only works with Apple devices... lol
Can you read before you jump to conclusions?
It works with any wireless device. The management application is an iOS application only right now.
-
@BRRABill or wrap it in aluminum foil to keep it from connecting to the wifi.
-
@BRRABill said:
@DustinB3403 said:
Only works with Apple devices... lol
I think it works with any device, but can only be configured on iOS.
@JaredBusch said:
@DustinB3403 said:
Only works with Apple devices... lol
Can you read before you jump to conclusions?
It works with any wireless device. The management application is an iOS application only right now.
Hence it only works with Apple.
-
@DustinB3403 said:
Hence it only works with Apple.
Semantics. Defines works. LOL.
I guess if you don't have an iOS device, you could borrow one to configure it, then never have to access it again.
Though if there is a lot of interaction with it, that is indeed a pretty odd limitation.
-
@DustinB3403 said:
@BRRABill said:
@DustinB3403 said:
Only works with Apple devices... lol
I think it works with any device, but can only be configured on iOS.
@JaredBusch said:
@DustinB3403 said:
Only works with Apple devices... lol
Can you read before you jump to conclusions?
It works with any wireless device. The management application is an iOS application only right now.
Hence it only works with Apple.
That's like saying that a car doesn't work with children because it requires an adult to operate it. The product works with whatever, it just is managed from a single platform. Annoying, but it doesn't change what it works with. If you apply this to other scenarios, you can't use "works" in this way.
-
@BRRABill said:
@DustinB3403 said:
Hence it only works with Apple.
Semantics. Defines works. LOL.
I guess if you don't have an iOS device, you could borrow one to configure it, then never have to access it again.
Though if there is a lot of interaction with it, that is indeed a pretty odd limitation.
It's a crappy limitation, but unless the goal of the device is to be managed and not to be parental controls, it's not limited to iOS.
-
The product is a very limited device, currently designed to only be managed from an Apple device makes it worthless to me. We don't own or like apple products in our house.
Something that is currently locked into a single manufacture platform makes it useless to me.
It only works, when you're attempting to manage it from an apple device.
I won't be posting to this topic any more.. starting to get a bit upset.
-
@DustinB3403 said:
The product is a very limited device, currently designed to only be managed from an Apple device makes it worthless to me. We don't own or like apple products in our house.
Something that is currently locked into a single manufacture platform makes it useless to me.
It only works, when you're attempting to manage it from an apple device.
I won't be posting to this topic any more.. starting to get a bit upset.
I get that it is very limiting. But once set up it "works" with all devices. Yes you have to set it up in one way, but you don't refer to things as "working" or "not working" based on the setup. Like we say "You have to set that up before it will work." So the setup requires iOS it seems, okay. that's annoying and limiting. But once setup it works with everything. The "thing that it does", the "reason that you buy it" are not in any way limited to iOS.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
Something that is currently locked into a single manufacture platform makes it useless to me.
But not from working, only from being setup. Yes, you have to set it up to work, but if someone set this up for you, it would work. If I got this for someone in my family and set it up for them, it would work even though they own no iOS devices, for example. Lots of things in IT like that.
-
Sorry, but I agree with @DustinB3403 . That's a huge product fail if you can only configure it on iOS. They shouldn't have released the device if it wasn't configurable by the majority of devices (iOS, Android, and Windows). There is really no reason, that they couldn't do this on a responsive web interface that would work with all 3 IMO.