يحاول ذهب - حر
Fan Boy
August 2018
|WIRED
It’s a parent’s job to think her child is exceptional.
WHEN LEO WAS 2, after he had mastered words like no and cat, he began saying “Akamahn!” The word baffled me and my husband, Karl. What was our son trying to tell us? He said it with such frequency—Akamahn! Akamahn!—it was as if he were summoning a god. Only after I heard our apartment’s maintenance man in the hallway did I put it together: vacuum.
Leo’s fascination was, it turned out, not with the gods but with the suction power of a Dyson— or, more generally, anything brought to life by energy. Once I figured that out, I spent hours with him, carrying around a desk lamp from outlet to outlet throughout our apartment lobby. Each time the light came on, it illuminated his ecstatic face, and often a slender thread of spittle that hung from his mouth. After Karl came home with a bag of extension cords, Leo linked them together and proceeded to wrap our lobby in one uninterrupted cord like a Christo installation.
One muggy summer day, after we’d been kicked out of the lobby, we stopped by a neighborhood consignment shop. The owner had set up a battalion of oscillating fans on just about every available surface. Leaning over a table to get a closer look at, say, a set of linen tea towels meant holding back hair, necklaces, fingers, to avoid the high speed blades. Leo, though, was fearless, running laps, hands first, around the store. “Dat one!” he’d say with a wildness usually reserved for picking flavors of ice cream. “Dat one!”
هذه القصة من طبعة August 2018 من WIRED.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من WIRED
WIRED
SPIT ON, SWORN AT, AND UNDETERRED: WHAT IT'S LIKE TO OWN A CYBERTRUCK
WIRED spoke to seven Tesla Cybertruck owners about their most controversial purchase and why they're proud to drive it.
3 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
COMFORT OBJECT
Ruby survives on affection, not utility.
4 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
THE YEAR IN BIG SHOES: FIDJI SIMO TAKES THE REINS
SAM ALTMAN HAS LONG BEEN THE FACE OF OPENAI. SO WHO'S THE NEW CEO HE PUT IN CHARGE OF ALL HIS PRODUCTS?
15 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
Bang for Your Buck
It's possible to scale horological heights without breaking the bank. Meet WIRED's top 10 bargains.
3 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
The Cure
A year ago, 250 million people were using ChatGPT every week. By February, that number rose to 400 million. Now it's 800 million. Of those, untold legions are confessing their innermost secrets to Al. This is the story of two humans-and their bots-on the very edge of therapy's new frontier.
56 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
SLEEP DREAMS
Margaret Thatcher, who was known for sleeping only four hours a night, is often credited with saying \"sleep is for wimps!\" But sleep is actually work. Putting down the phone, setting aside personal or political worries-these require discipline. True relaxation calls for training.
4 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
DECISION TIME
Do you go all in on one pricey, luxe watch or assemble a swarm of budget timepieces? Let's crunch the numbers.
7 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
THE MANY SIDES OF Ed Zitron
He's one of the loudest voices of the Al haters-even as he does PR for Al companies. Either way, the multi-platform British tech writer has your attention.
17 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
The Worst Thing About AI Is That People CAN'T SHUT UP ABOUT IT
A plea from WIRED's top boss: Say less.
3 mins
January / February 2026
WIRED
THE YEAR IN BIG DATA: ALEX KARP GOES TO WAR
PALANTIR'S CEO IS GOOD WITH ICE AND SAYS HE DEFENDS HUMAN RIGHTS. BUT WILL ISRAEL AND TRUMP EVER GO TOO FAR FOR HIM?
12 mins
January / February 2026
Translate
Change font size
