Two years ago, Google bought Launchpad Toys, the company behind the popular Toontastic kids app for iOS that allows you — whether you are a kid or not — to easily tell your stories through animations.
released a new version of its popular animation app for children, Toontastic, that will allow kids to create their own 3D stories. And, it’s still free. Called Toontastic 3D, the app offers a visual ...
GeekDad have had the fantastic experience in being involved with the beta testing of a new app from LaunchPad Toys that takes creativity and different learning domains on the iPad to dynamic new ...
If there’s anything kids enjoy more than hearing a story, it’s telling one themselves. And that’s a good thing — psychologists widely believe that imaginative activities like storytelling help ...
Google Education has launched a 3D version of Toontastic, almost two years after Mountain View bought the company that created it. The new Toontastic stays true to the original version: it's still a ...
NEW YORK—The free Toontastic 3D digital storytelling app that Google launches Thursday for home and classroom use met high praise from exactly the kind of user Google has in mind. That would be my ...
Launchpad Toys is the creator of Toontastic and other apps that facilitate digital storytelling and digital play. When it first emerged with its iOS apps I was taken by its approach and philosophy ...
Google has rolled out a new update to Toontastic 3D, adding two fresh content themes to the storytelling app that the search giant released in January of this year. One of the themes is inspired by ...
Google just launched a new storytelling app that will help kids create their own cartoons. It's called Toontastic 3D. Kids can use it to make animations using a set of built-in characters or create ...
DreamWorks' portfolio approach to interactive licensing brings Shrek to Launchpad Toys’ new iOS app, Toontastic Jr. Shrek. As far as I know, the partnership between DreamWorks and Launchpad Toys ...
The search giant scoops up Launchpad Toys and its popular make-your-own cartoon app for kids, which is now free to all users. CNET contributor Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered ...