This favorite Mac/Windows app now becomes available for babies to play also on the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.
Babylooba is entertainment for babies. There are plenty of applications for toddlers and young kids, mainly educational games and not particularly interesting for babies. Babylooba is for this younger crowd, babies and small toddlers. Even from the age where the wash label is the most interesting part of the teddy bear.
As all parents know, iPhones and iPads are exciting devices for your baby. They are nice to the touch, interesting to feel, hold, look at and sometimes even to taste. But combined with good software they can turn into formidable baby toys!
Watch your baby takes his or hers first steps to explore the captivating magic of controlling what happens on the screen. Babylooba is a pedagogic app made for the babys fun.
For the baby, everything has to be learnt from scratch such as motor functions, coordination, social interactions, and brain functions. Babylooba aspires to catch the babys interest and stimulate the desire to direct the hands in order to achieve highly rewarding visuals and sound effects.
Babylooba plays in all four device orientations. The baby can rotate the device and the visual effects will always pop up just above where the touch (or hammering) occurs. Useful also if the baby has discovered the Home button, turn the button furthest away from the baby!
Use the Autoplay feature to have the device play a sound and animation if the baby has been idle for a little while.
Use the "difficulty" setting to set the number of colors to be used. The younger the baby, the lower number of colors the baby will prefer, where red only will provide the most interesting contrast for many babies.
The "multitouch" setting is useful if the baby rends to hold onto the device or to lean against it in a manner that normally will block additional touches from being recognized. With this mode activated, every new touch will trigger the activity even if for example the parent is touching the display by holding the device or if the baby has a foot touching a corner...