GeekDad held a contest, asking readers to submit pictures of themselves and their kids sharing a geeky activity, and we received some wonderful shots. But we had to narrow them down, so here are the top 10 Generation Geek images, as picked by the GeekDad readers.

Leave Us Alone, We're Coding



by Brianne Copp "This is basically their natural habitat, so it wasn't hard to capture. I love that they have almost the same serious expression on their faces in this one."



Vintage Geek Kid



By Amity M "Early training for an amateur radio operator ;) My dad with me in 1977 (I'm about 6 months old), showing me the Hammarlund SP-400 Receiver (possibly the SP-200). I got my Ham radio license 20 years later. He & my mom are both amateur radio operators. 73, VE6MIA"



Sofia Reading Bone in Our Library

By Gerald "Our daughter Sophia, age 4, enjoying Bone while sitting in her 'very own chair' in our newly refurbished library."



Homemade Wicket and Leia costumes

By Rian "Our daughter(6) wanted to be Leia, so we talked her into the Endor costume so that her brother(3) could be Wicket (he was a perfect Ewok!). They had fun acting out the cracker scene over and over. She got a taste of geek bias when kids at her elementary school didn't believe she was Leia. (Leia wears a WHITE DRESS!)"



An Intense Game of Chess



By Michael C. "Catalena Trying out chess for the first time."



Raise Them on Gadgets



By Anonymous "Plenty of gadgets went into this normal morning at our household. iPhone, iPad, Canon 500d, pyjamas, Casio watch - you name it."



3.0 Plays WoW



By Jon 3.0 "2 yr old Jon battles the Horde opposition in Warsong Gulch."



Charlie Watches Star Wars



By Jene "Our 20 month old son has zero interest in TV. Unless Star Wars is on."



Confirming Myths



By Aimee "The rocket went up on the third try (by which time we had abandoned all use of measuring devices)."



The Tools to Succeed



By Micheal "We gave Ryan his first real tools when he was 2. Now 4 he can use the saw, drill, screwdrivers, pliers and shovels with relative proficiency. Here he's cleaning up after helping dismantle our deck. Empower your kids real tools*, real projects and real one-on-one attention. They'll learn much more than they will with a Dora The Explorer video about a magic hammer that talks. *Be they real tools for wood working, an actual breadboard with power source and LEDs, real instruments, a real computer or whatever they're interested in."