Practical thinking for parents navigating kids and technology — written by a technologist and parent who built Leassh to solve these problems.
Consumer parental control apps create resistance, get tampered with, and upload your family's data to the cloud. SSH monitoring built into every OS offers a better way — no installation, maximum privacy, true cross-platform support.
Read article AI UnderstandingYou know they were on the computer for three hours. But doing what? “2h Chrome, 1h Roblox” isn’t an answer. AI can now turn behavioral patterns into a weekly portrait — what they’re learning, what they’re passionate about, what changed this week.
Read article PrivacyMost parental monitoring apps are, technically, spyware — hidden processes, cloud data upload, indiscriminate capture. There’s a better approach: behavioral insight from the outside, data that stays on your home network, and a conversation your child knows about.
Read article ReviewsAn honest comparison from someone who built one of them. What Bark does well (a lot), where Qustodio fits, why Net Nanny is fading, and the question none of them fully answer.
Read article ReviewsApple Screen Time only monitors Apple devices. If your kids use Windows, Chromebooks, or Android, Screen Time leaves you blind. Learn why cross-platform visibility matters and when it's worth moving beyond Apple’s built-in tool.
Read article ReviewsFamily Link is free but only monitors Android. Leassh gives you visibility across all devices—Mac, Windows, iPad, Android, Chromebooks—with local-first privacy. Compare features, costs, and when each makes sense.
Read article Digital ParentingParenting three kids across different ages and devices. How to set up differentiated monitoring, create age-appropriate rules, and maintain a weekly routine that keeps you aware without obsessing.
Read article Screen TimeGoogle Admin Console manages devices but doesn't monitor what kids do. Learn why school Chromebooks need activity monitoring, how admin tools fail parents, and why network-level monitoring is the solution.
Read article Digital ParentingMost parental control dashboards tell you how long your child used the computer. But "4 hours on the computer" means nothing without context. Emma's 4 hours could be learning 3D modeling or mindlessly scrolling. Here's why the distinction matters.
Read article Screen TimeThe standard advice — 2 hours max — treats 3 hours of coding and 1 hour of TikTok as identical. One is good, one isn't, and a timer can't tell the difference. A better framework for 2026.
Read article GamingA father panicked because his son played Minecraft 5 hours on weekends. Turned out he was building cities, teaching himself architecture, and making YouTube tutorials. Not addiction — passion. Here's how to tell the difference.
Read article HomelabMy Ollama inference dropped to 3 tokens per second. My son had fired up Fortnite on the same machine. Here’s the SSH fleet monitoring setup that fixed it automatically — no cgroups required.
Read article HomelabYou have five machines. Prometheus needs exporters on all of them. Grafana needs dashboards. There’s a simpler way — SSH in, ask what’s happening across your whole lab, get an answer. One config file, no agents on target machines.
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