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Marggraff has been married to his wife, MJ, since 1988. Together, they have two children, Blake and Annie. In 2004, Marggraff was named “Father of the Year” by the National Father’s Day Council. [23] MJ Marggraff, Jim Marggraff’s wife, has a doctoral degree from USC and is a trained pilot.
LeapPad was invented by Jim Marggraff [1] and developed by a team from Explore Technologies, Inc., which was founded by Marggraff and was acquired by LeapFrog in July 1998. It uses the same patented "NearTouch" technology developed for the Explore Technologies Odyssey Atlasphere. Investigation and development was started in December 1997.
As of 2009, LeapFrog had discontinued both versions of the FLY Pentop Computer. This also included a halt of all support accessories such as notepads and ink refills which are required for continued use of the pen. The inventor of the FLY Pentop, Jim Marggraff, left LeapFrog and founded Livescribe in January 2007.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 26 December 2024. American educational entertainment and electronics company "LeapFrog" redirects here. For the children's game, see Leapfrog. For other uses, see Leapfrog (disambiguation). This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available ...
The LeapTV is an educational video game console developed by LeapFrog and released on October 20, 2014. [3] The console consists of the main unit, a motion sensing camera, and a modifiable controller for different play styles.
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Johns Hopkins Blue Jays (Centennial Conference) (1990–2018): 1990: Johns Hopkins 5–4–1: 4–2–1: 3rd: 1991: Johns Hopkins 5–4–1
Jim Marggraff (B.S. Electrical Engineering, M.S. Computer Science) – inventor of the LeapPad Learning System, Fly pentop computer, and Livescribe smartpen [26] Lissa Martinez (M.S. 1980) – ocean engineer; Regina Murphy (SB 1978, PhD 1989) – professor of chemical engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison [27]
The Leapster Explorer is a handheld console developed and marketed by LeapFrog Enterprises as the third generation of the successful Leapster series at the same time as the Didj2 console. [1] It is aimed at children aged 4 to 9.