I’ve heard there are a lot of people who listen to PBS Space Time to fall asleep.
I’ve heard there are a lot of people who listen to PBS Space Time to fall asleep.
OMG! That’s what those crystals are!
The site wouldn’t load for me, but I did manage to capture an archive:
I found the juxtaposition of your comment to the one below yours to be pretty funny.
Is wefwef even an app, or just a web page that you can “install” as a web page that opens without a URL bar?
I agree. So far it’s the best one I’ve used on Android. It has things like settings for font sizes.
UPDATE: I find myself using Liftoff more now. I couldn’t exactly tell you why. The only things it’s missing is an option to make the comment font larger.
It absolutely will help. It doesn’t need to be anything fancy. Any blanket that would keep you warm in bed will work, even better than blackout curtains since a blanket will have a good R-value.
Blackout curtains like others have recommended are not great insulators. They simply have an opaque, rubbery, white backside to reflect and block sunlight. The will block currents of warm air from moving between the rooms, but a blanket does that, too, and provides a higher R-value.
I live in an RV van and had blackout curtains between the front and back of the van for years before I decided to also add a quilt, and it made a huge difference in keeping the back warm in winter, and keeping the sun-caused heat out of the back in summer.
When I lived in an apartment I used to have a blanket between the kitchen and living room. The living room had an AC unit, and the kitchen had… an oven. The difference the blanket made was astronomical!
Lasagna! So effin good.
Your link is backwards. The text goes in the square brackets and the URL in the parentheses.
Chuck E Cheese in 1994?
[Chuck E Cheese in 1994?](https://youtu.be/tzjdP94rKH4)