The first 50 videos of the new camera

We still don’t have a good system set up.  I’m uploading them with the youtube uploader, managing about a dozen overnight in full resolution, so at least in terms of video quality there’s something gained for our loyal readers, even if promptness has taken a brutal hit.

Grouped (roughly) by theme:
Joseph: Picking up and counting, Singing in Japanese, Singing Bappe’s ditty, Reading in German (again), Reading Händel, Picking up with letters, Pi, Counting in French, You Can Count on Monsters (again) (again), Art Inspired by Monsters, Singing by the Drain, Up to 11, 12 and beyond, Ten out of Bed, City Blocks, Green Eggs and Ham (cont’d), A Message from Mommy, Counting in French, Grandma’s Squares Book.

Vivienne: What does the dog say?, Flash cards, Exercising with Mommy, Bend it like Beckham, Too Cute to Perform (again), Brushing Teeth, Jump, Harvest, Chase the Camera, Bunnies, Balcony Chalk, Math Time, Counting in French, Playing together with the Hammer Toy (again), Dancing.

Other family: Four on a couch.

Our surroundings: Janet’s due date surprise, F/A-18 landing (again), Drilling Holes (again), Foundations, After Drilling the Hole (again), Sinking Rebar,

Other: Paradigm Change

3 thoughts on “The first 50 videos of the new camera

  1. Linda Wightman

    I couldn’t confirm, on the fly, that the numbers between “358” and “288” were correct, but now that I know pi to 36 digits (not to be undone in this by my three-year-old grandson, at least for now), he does have it right.

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  2. Linda Wightman

    What’s going on with Ten Out of Bed? Is he translating? Have you transcribed it for him? Or have you translated it while you “read” it to him and he remembers what you said?

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  3. thduggie Post author

    Ten Out of Bed: I think he’s translating. He sometimes does that, and when he doesn’t know a word uses the English one, often making it sound German. Today we rode the train that Janet calls the cool train (it has a kid car); Joseph later called it “de cool Zug,” with the “c” sounding like a hard, scratchy Swiss “k” sound.

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