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LeapPad 2 Explorer (released in the summer of 2012) [2] [3] LeapPad Ultra (released in the summer of 2013) [4] LeapPad 3 (released in the summer of 2014): A handheld educational tablet-computer considered by many to be the spiritual successor to the LeapPad2, although said device is part of the LeapPad Explorer line of educational tablets. It ...
The ClickStart (with the slogan My First Computer) is an educational computer system created for children aged between 3 and 6 years (toddler to kindergarten) by LeapFrog Enterprises and was introduced in 2007. It is LeapFrog's second home console, and the first to come with its own games.
The LeapReader is an electronic reading and writing system that succeeded the Tag Reading System which only taught reading skills. [25] The company released LeapBand, its first wearable activity tracker for children, in 2014. [26] LeapFrog also released its LeapPad3 and LeapPad Ultra XDi tablet devices in 2014. [27]
The company used paper-based computing platforms to create the first line of smart pens, which were ballpoint pens with embedded computer and digital audio recording systems. The first edition of the smart pen, the Pulse, was released in October 2008. New editions of the pen have been released, with the most recent being the Livescribe 3.
The first LeapPad was so popular in 2011 that it became Walmart Store's most popular toy placed on layaway ahead of the telltale holiday shopping season. A year later the initial supply of the ...
The LeapFrog Epic (styled as LeapFrog epic) is an Android-based mini-tablet computer produced and marketed by LeapFrog Enterprises.Released in 2015, the Epic is LeapFrog's first device to run on Android; most of LeapFrog's mobile computing devices for children run on a customized Ångström Linux distribution.
The Leapster Learning Game System (previously known as the Leapster Multimedia Learning System) is an educational handheld game console aimed at 4- to 10–11-year-olds (preschool to fourth grade or fifth grade), made by LeapFrog Enterprises.
Yet such a system wouldn't necessarily prevent a situation like the one faced by the Bills against the Chiefs last week. On a crucial fourth-quarter play, Buffalo's Josh Allen appeared to gain a ...