You better watch out, Santa!
NORAD is on track to receive a record number of phone calls from  children eager for updates on his present-dropping journey around the  world, and they’re even using smartphone apps for the first time to keep  tabs on Old St. Nick.
On Saturday, volunteers at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado, where NORAD is based, told the AP that calls about 
Santa Claus were on pace to break a record – with more than 4,000 calls an hour coming in – starting at early as 4 a.m.
Though the tracking tradition dates to 1955, NORAD has becoming  increasingly high tech to help instantly answer inquiries about Santa’s  whereabouts, cookie preferences and more.
 “Hello facebook followers. NORAD uses advanced radar and satellite  technology to track Santa. However, he won't deliver to your house, and  you can't see him in his sleigh, unless you're asleep!” the  Santa-tracking agency wrote on its Facebook page, which has more than  876,000 fans.
The @NoradSanta Twitter account has more than 85,000 followers and even boasts a Google Plus page.
NORAD uses its social media outlets to remind curious children that  they have to be asleep for Santa to come, advise them what kind of  cookies to put out (on Oreos: “oh yeah, double stuff”) and tell kids not  to fret over a run-in between overeager pets and Santa.
“Tell her not to worry, I will be extra careful, I love puppies!” the tracker tweeted to one concerned kid.
NORAD’s Santa Tracker app includes not only up-to-date information on  Santa’s path, but games like Elf Toss, which is similar to Angry Birds,  according to the Associated Press.
NORAD, which normally tracks activity in American skies and seas for  defense purposes, got into the Santa-tracking business quite by  accident.
A  Colorado Springs store’s advertisement in 1955 encouraged kids to  call a special hotline – but accidentally printed the number of the  Director of Operations at Continental Air Defense Command, according to  the NORAD website. The Director of Operations at the time, Col. 
Harry Shoup, then instructed his staff to check the radar for updates on his location – a tradition which has continued since.
“Based on historical data and more than 50 years of NORAD tracking  information, we believe that Santa Claus is alive and well in the hearts  of children throughout the world,” the website added.