Show HN: BookaBooka, a multilingual picture book app for children 2-8

bookabooka.com

4 points by SjorsM a year ago

BookaBooka is a child friendly app with a library of 150+ picture books available in 20+ languages. Books can be read in single, or dual language mode. Any language combination is possible.

Research shows: - clear benefits of children that are being read to from an early age. - parents should read to their children in the language they are most proficient in, which might be a different language from the one used in school, and therefore a language that is harder for them to acquire books in.

With BookaBooka I hope to provide all children in the world, including immigrants, expats and refugees with a library in their native tongue, and the privilege of being read to, even if parents aren't willing or able.

I work with a growing network of language enthusiasts that help me translate / narrate our collection. These people work on a semi-voluntary basis (royalty model + low revenue currently resembles volunteer work).

You can try BookaBooka out for free, it is available in all major appstores:

- iOS: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bookabooka/id1507793956?l=nl&l...

- Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.companynam...

- Microsoft: https://www.microsoft.com/nl-nl/p/bookabooka/9ndph6hpb8g0

petodo a year ago

Third screenshot - easily operated by small children (2+)

Do you think it's healthy for 2yo to stare at smartphone or tablet?

  • SjorsM a year ago

    My wife is an optometrist, looking at a screen is not unhealthy. The main problem is that the eyes of children are still in development (growing). When an eye has it's focus too nearby for too long at a time, the eye will grow incorrectly, resulting in near-sighted kids that need glasses. This means that looking at a book at close range for extended periods of time is equally bad. Therefore the guidance they give is: after looking for 20 minutes at something close by they should at least focus far away for 20 seconds, also they should be outside for at least 2 hours a day so your eyes receive enough daylight. shorturl.at/w2367 (page is in dutch)

    • petodo a year ago

      the rest of your comment is contradicting your first sentence, since what you suggest is not how people let children use these devices

      but yeah, I'm also trying to restrict my kids reading time since I'm aware it's unhealthy for eyes as well (as proven by myopia from memorizing in China even way before tablets/smartphones)

      • SjorsM a year ago

        That depends how you interpret it. It is fine if you give a child a tablet, with the condition that you also manage the things they do on it, and the time spent. You have to be responsible as a teacher / parent. This applies with all things that children want, but can not yet self-regulate yet, like eating candy or watching tv.