(KID.ee kam)
n.
A camcorder that displays a live feed so that parents can monitor either their children or their children's babysitter from a remote location.
Example Citation:
Little Sunshine's Playhouse Day Care...is a 24-hour day-care facility that is licensed to hold 64 kids per shift. There will be 24 employees working around the clock...There will be video cameras called "Kiddie cams" in each room that allow parents to go onto a Web site to watch their children playing anytime during the day or night.
— "Rooflines," Springfield News-Leader (Springfield, MO), May 27, 2002
Earliest Citation:
For parents with nannies or au pairs, Campaign spokeswoman Ellen Lubell said they may want to try one of the "kiddie cam" that monitor and record baby sitters. But always tell baby sitters in advance that they may be recorded, Lubell said, or they may complain that you've violated their privacy or impugned them professionally with your suspicions.
— H.J. Cummins, "National study finds Minnesota child care 'minimally acceptable'," Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN), November 14, 1997
Notes:
Kiddie cams are also known as kinder-cams and cradle cams. They began as home-based devices that enabled parents to monitor their kids from another room, or tape what the babysitter or nanny was up to when the parents were away. When Web cams became popular, it didn't take long for the technology to migrate to the Internet. Now many day-care centers boast kiddie cams that offer a Web-based video feed that enables monitoring over the Internet.
Related Words:
Categories:
New words. 2013.