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Reading a toddler one of my books?

I wouldn't say that in public. Child Protective Services lacks a sense of humor.

If he asked for a line 220 line, would you give him one?

No, never mind, you probably shouldn't say in public.

@Michael W Lucas¹ :flan_mail: his first words on seeing a tape recorder was "Can we take it apart?!"

When I gave him a guitar pick to play his learning guitar, he immediately started to try to find how he could get the guitar open (since he knows what picks are for)

We're building him his own https://www.clockworkpi.com/gameshell together, with him hands on pieces

so... I miiiiiight

I might also have broken my toddler (or maybe doomed)

Nah, the toddler's fine.

The world? Maybe not...

At least it wasn't savaged by system d, since we have that one too I'm pretty sure @Michael W Lucas¹ :flan_mail: @silverwizard
You might need something more like this:
http://holyjoe.org/poetry/anonE.htm
@silverwizard @Michael W Lucas¹ :flan_mail: I continue to find aspects of SSH I wasn't previously aware of to this day.
Sure, but the popup edition of Absolute OpenBSD is great for kids.
This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)
I'm thinking @mwl has a whole untapped market... :flan_think:
A picture of a baby holding a book with the original title of "CSS for Babies", except it has been 'shopped to read "ZFS for Babies".  While cute, the kid looks a little shell-shocked.

reshared this

He must be a Windows user.

@sirwumpus
He's far too young to have chosen a preferred OS.

Give him ten years, and he'll experiment with Inferno just because he think it'll piss off Dad.

@Michael W Lucas¹ :flan_mail: @SirWumpus His grandpa's university friend wrote Inferno, so uh... he has the access

My dad wrote Coherent, so I rebelled against my OS dev dad by becoming a sysadmin, so I hope he makes better decisions than me

Or he'll try to install SystemD on Dad's BSD work station.