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The Snoo doesn’t come cheap at $1,295. But, when you break it down and think about it, it’s not that much more expensive than most baby things. You get three different sized sleep sacks (the two biggest sizes allow your baby to keep his arms out when he gets tired of being all tucked it), a noise machine with five

The Snoo doesn’t come cheap at $1,295. But, when you break it down and think about it, it’s not that much more

Yeah totally we shouldn’t try to be better just because other people are worse.

Lol @ “civil discourse”

Because as part of an attempt at maintaining work/life balance, I don’t take my laptop home from the office unless I have something very specific to catch up on, or something to be on-call for. Since I am leaving that computer in the office, I like to make sure my personal Google account is totally signed out so that

That’s like, your opinion, man.

You have mistaken my post as rhetorical snark. I’m all for people doing what works for them. That’s the point of my question — if it works for so many people, I asked why so that I might learn if there’s something that I’d find helpful in my daily life.

That is a fair point. For work we are mostly a Microsoft-based development shop, which to this day is still best experienced through thick clients. So there’s a good chance that my overhead of having more applications open (e.g. MS Teams client, Visual Studio, a few RDP sessions, Outlook) replaces how a lot of people

Of course! But all those things save and can be reopened.

I feel this. I am a software dev, as well. As mentioned in another reply, in a situation like that, my brain just needs to be as clutter free as possible, so I will tend to take notes down from the different articles/examples/etc. that I’m reading through, so once I reach the approach I want to take, I can close up

That makes sense to me. We just have different brains. I am a software developer and so half of what you describe applies to me most days, but I find if I leave too many resources open, it just makes it tougher to make a decision on which approach to take, etc. So I will often have a few tabs open while researching

I hear you, but Jeff Sullivan makes some great points here:

Am I the only one that just like, closes tabs?

But... how?

Marcy issued a mea culpa after the CNN report. The CNN report was more thorough and included details the NBC report didn’t. I think her analysis of the NBC report was fair, given how credulously all media outlets have reported Rudy’s bullshit about “the report” over and over again. But she admitted the CNN report

Absolutely right.

Nice read, thanks Dave!

He tends to speak like that guy at a lecture who has more of a “comment than a question.”

The *best* possible read on this is that it was incredibly stupid. Satire is incredibly difficult to pull of for a large audience, and it seems that’d be especially true in a publication that is ostensibly geared toward the trade/professional reader.

Not specific to the Rays, but my theory based on personal experience and preferences is that HDTV has changed everything for every major sport.

Definitely good to give people the heads-up, but I think the more appropriate headline isn’t so catchy — “Talk to your local recycling facility.”