I hope you’re ready to feel underaccomplished and unsympathetic for your age. An 11 year-old boy named Cameron finished coding iSketch, a drawing app for the iPhone, this past December. Sales have reportedly been good, but instead of stocking up on Nerf guns and Lego mansions, Cameron is donating a large portion of his profits to the Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA where he received care for an undisclosed medical problem.
Cameron’s father wrote the following letter to CrunchGear:
My son Cameron is 11 years old and, last year, he had a medical problem that prevented him from participating in the physical activities he otherwise enjoys. (He is nearly fully recovered.) During that time, Cameron became interested in computers, and he began to read anything he could get his hands on. He watched Stanford University professors on iTunes, scoured the web for articles on programming and taught himself several different programming languages. (Neither my wife nor I have any idea how to program.) Cameron began to focus on the iPhone and iPod touch devices as the “apps” offered for sale for use on those devices seemed really cool to him. He began to work on a few different apps. After completing some summer camps on programming and continuing to read and learn, Cameron finalized an app, which he calls iSketch, and submit it to Apple. The app, which is a painting/drawing program, was approved by Apple for sale on its App Store in December. (He has since updated it several times..)
Inspired by the care he received at Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and Orthopaedic Hospital, Cameron has dedicated a substantial portion of the proceeds from his sales to purchase entertainment and electronic items for Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA’s Child Life/Child Development programs in Westwood and Santa Monica so that pre-teens and teens will have additional age-appropriate options available to them during their Hospital stays. Cameron’s sales so far have been good, but he hopes to accelerate them so that he can donate even more to the Hospital.
Thank you, Cameron, for that healthy dose of what-are-you-doing-with-your-life-itis. If you want to feel marginally decent about yourself, you can get Cameron’s app for just $.99.
