Mar 11

What if I told you there was a technique you could use to bring your family closer together and teach your children important life skills? What if I told you it could be both fun and free?

The simple technique is setting up a regular family game night. It sounds too simple, too easy, but spending time every week or every month together as a family playing games can reap tremendous rewards for your family and especially your children. Your children will learn important social skills and academic skills, but you will all benefit from bonding together over board games or whatever your choice of activity.

Playing board games can teach children important social skills such as taking turns and how to be a good winner or loser. They also learn a lot about interpersonal communication as you talk and laugh together while you play the game.

Do not overlook the many academic benefits children can reap from playing games as well. Even young children learn simple skills such as counting, colors and shapes and as they grow older they learn sorting, matching, and reading skills from games. As children grow older then you can advance to more challenging games that require higher level thinking and reasoning skills.

Today’s family usually has a busy schedule that often sends each member bustling off in a different direction much of the week. There are not many occasions when a family actually sits down together for more than the few minutes it takes to eat a meal (and sometimes not even that long). Setting aside a dedicate game night will mean that your family will have a few hours where there are no outside distractions and you are simply focused on enjoying each other. Playing a game takes the pressure off so there is no need to force conversation, but you might be surprised what you learn about and from your children during this time. Even if a rousing game of “Sorry” or “Trouble” does not inspire confidences right away, it will surely give you time to simply enjoy being together and will lead to the type of memories that your children will carry with them throughout their lives. Once your children know that they will have this time with your undivided attention then this will likely become the time when they do test out important questions and confidences.

It is important to set out some important guidelines for this night. It would be great to set aside one night a week, but perhaps it is only possible to hold a game night every two weeks or once a month. The most important element is that you make an effort to be consistent so children can look forward to the night and can rely on it. Second, you must turn off the television (all the TVs in the house) and makes sure the answering machine is on. No answering the phone or door bell (except maybe to collect the pizza). This is family time and family should be the priority. Short of fire, death or dismemberment there is nothing that cannot wait until after your game(s) are done. You should set aside at least one hour when children are younger and two hours when they are older but do not make an announcement of the time to avoid clock watching. The actual games do not matter much as long as they are board or card games. Computer games will not achieve the same results so you should avoid those.

Regular family game nights can reap tremendous benefits. Your children will learn important social skills and academic skills and you will all benefit from bonding together over a fun, relaxing activity. Go ahead and give it a try. You have nothing to lose and a whole lot to gain.

Deanna Mascle shares more tips about Family Fun Activities in her blog at familyfunforyou.info

Feb 5

The future of home entertainment is currently quite unclear. Many people are happy with DVDs, still amazed at the quality improvement over VHS videos, but the early adopters, as ever, are chomping at the bit to get their hands on the next generation of players and formats. Unfortunately, since the invention of DVD, there has been a split in the industry, and there are two rival formats set to battle it out to be the successor to DVD: HD-DVD and Blu-ray.

HD-DVD is the official successor to DVD from the DVD Forum, the group of companies that came up with the original DVD standard. The HD part stands for ‘high density’, like in HDTV, and indicates higher-capacity discs with much better picture quality.

Blu-ray, on the other hand, is supported by a group of breakaway companies led by Sony, the inventors of the format. It is named after the blue laser it uses to read discs, allowing more data to be written on the disc than with normal red laser formats. Sony hopes that the inclusion of Blu-ray in its Playstation 3 video game console will jump-start the format, as it will mean that many people already have a Blu-ray player right there in their home before they’ve even heard about HD-DVD.

Industry insiders and enthusiasts are split on the merits of the format: many feel that Sony must have lost its mind, as including a Blu-ray player in the Playstation 3 will jack the price up, while others are excited to be getting the player so quickly and at a reasonable price. Many believe that HD-DVD will eventually win out, however, simply because of its greater number of supporters.

So what should you do? Historically, markets will only support one video format – so one of these is destined to be the next VHS, and one is going to be the next Betamax. As anyone who bought a Betamax player can tell you, the best thing to do is to wait and see who wins before you buy anything from the next generation of formats.

John Gibb is the owner of Home Entertainment guidance For more information on home entertainment systems check out http://www.Home-Entertainment-guidance.Info

Jun 29

As home entertainment equipment gets cheaper and the quality gets better each year, more and more people are starting to wonder about setting up their own home cinema system. So what are the advantages and disadvantages of a home cinema compared to just going to the real cinema?

Well, let’s start with price. Sure, going to the cinema can be expensive, especially if you buy popcorn and hotdogs every time, but it’s nothing compared to the cost of buying a home cinema system. For the price all the equipment you need, even though the price is going down, you could still go to the cinema every week for years – and that’s before you consider the cost of buying or renting the films!

However, the fact that you can buy and rent films is a big upside of having a good home entertainment system. When you go to the cinema, your choices are limited to what they’ve got – with a home cinema, combined with the unique power of the Internet to locate almost any DVD in existence; your choices are almost unlimited.

Yes, you have to make your own film food, but at least it’s cheap, and you can have as much as you want. You also don’t have to put up with other people eating and talking through the film – but if you want to pause it and answer your phone then at home you can.

Really, it’s a trade-off, even once you take price out of the equation: you’re never going to get a screen as big and a sound system as good as the one in the cinema, but what you lose in quality you make up for in control. Besides, many movie buffs say that although the picture may be smaller, they believe that the overall quality of the film is higher when they configure their own equipment, instead of leaving it to the underpaid teenagers who staff the projectors in modern cinemas.

John Gibb is the owner of Home Entertainment guidance For more information on home entertainment check http://www.Home-Entertainment-guidance.Info