The late-Apple co-founder, Steve Jobs, didn't allow his children to have iPads and limited their exposure to technology.
When iPad roared into success in 2010, his youngest daughters weren't allowed to have one, Times columnist Nick Bilton recalled Jobs telling New York Times in 2010.
His youngest kids were 12 and 15 when the iPad came out, reported Daily Mail.
At the dinner table in their kitchen, Steve Jobs discussing books and history, according to his biographer Walter Issacson.
"We limit how much technology our kids use at home," the report added.
In fact, there are other executives who limit their kids' exposure to the very technology they develop.
Chris Anderson, CEO, 3D Robotics was quoted as saying that his kids accuse him of being 'fascist'. "We have seen the dangers of technology first-hand...".
But there are several techie parents who disagree.