Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Corona Virus


Ja  Rhule
 Share

Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, Devil Doc said:

Working from home is horrible. It sucks bad. You can never get anything done because you have children running around, and too much noise. I get 3x done at work, than I do at home. Work is a mini vacation to me. However, for some people it is the opposite. I have not been able to do any virtual meetings, because I cannot get the time to be alone, with no noise, completely focused. 

I know how you feel.  I’d be in a meeting with my office door closed and my kid would stay on the other side and either do stupid faces or throw ball against the glass door.  I feel bad for them as they starving for attention as well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, Ja Rhule said:

I know how you feel.  I’d be in a meeting with my office door closed and my kid would stay on the other side and either do stupid faces or throw ball against the glass door.  I feel bad for them as they starving for attention as well.

I just spent $1500 buying them a playground for the backyard. Once it gets put together, hopefully that keeps them busy. 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Devil Doc said:

Working from home is horrible. It sucks bad. You can never get anything done because you have children running around, and too much noise. I get 3x done at work, than I do at home. Work is a mini vacation to me. However, for some people it is the opposite. I have not been able to do any virtual meetings, because I cannot get the time to be alone, with no noise, completely focused. 

 

1 hour ago, Ja Rhule said:

I know how you feel.  I’d be in a meeting with my office door closed and my kid would stay on the other side and either do stupid faces or throw ball against the glass door.  I feel bad for them as they starving for attention as well.

where the fug is the mrs at?

my kids are all hers during work hours, F that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, GOAT said:

 

where the fug is the mrs at?

my kids are all hers during work hours, F that.

Unless your wife is Mary Poppins there a limits to how much small children can be entertained/occupied while stuck at home for almost 2+ months.  These posts hit me in the feels, I cannot wait to be back in the office. 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, Ounce said:

Unless your wife is Mary Poppins there a limits to how much small children can be entertained/occupied while stuck at home for almost 2+ months.  These posts hit me in the feels, I cannot wait to be back in the office. 

Well yeah, but I still get my poo done. 1 year old and 6 year old.

Idk, different strokes for different folks I guess. This whole thing may have turned me into a remote worker for good.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/07/us/new-york-city-coronavirus-outbreak.html

Over all, Dr. Grubaugh estimated, infections spreading from New York account for 60 to 65 percent of the sequenced viruses across the country.

“New York acted as the Grand Central Station for this virus, with the opportunity to move from there in so many directions, to so many places,” said David Engelthaler, head of the infectious disease branch of the Translational Genomics Research Institute in Arizona.

It's time to stop this charade of propping Governor Cuomo up as some type of national hero in this pandemic. New York did a terrible job of handling their outbreak and their terrible job largely led to the national outbreak. If you want a national hero, I'd look toward the west coast where those states and major cities did MUCH better jobs containing their own outbreaks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Ounce said:

Unless your wife is Mary Poppins there a limits to how much small children can be entertained/occupied while stuck at home for almost 2+ months.  These posts hit me in the feels, I cannot wait to be back in the office. 

 

40 minutes ago, GOAT said:

Well yeah, but I still get my poo done. 1 year old and 6 year old.

Idk, different strokes for different folks I guess. This whole thing may have turned me into a remote worker for good.

I have a 9 month old, who cries everytime you leave the room. I have an 8 yo that has ADHD, hard to keep him occupied, then I have a 5 yo nephew. They play with neighborhood kids, however, they always tromping in the house. They will also know I am busy, and bother me because they can. It is tough on my wife. 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, stirs said:

Yep

Quest $119

Have to visit one of their labs, make appt and pay online, come in with mask, they call your name, get results via internet.

Feel like my wife had it because of her symptoms.  Thinking/hoping I was the asymptomatic carrier where she caught it(something).  I have been in and out and she never left home.

Will advise

Supposedly those are not very accurate. They scrapped them here after round one of nasal swabs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Devil Doc said:

 

I have a 9 month old, who cries everytime you leave the room. I have an 8 yo that has ADHD, hard to keep him occupied, then I have a 5 yo nephew. They play with neighborhood kids, however, they always tromping in the house. They will also know I am busy, and bother me because they can. It is tough on my wife. 

Every family has its own dynamics.  My kid is pretty independent and let's me be.  Its my wife that can't seem to understand that I'm trying to work.

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Wes21 said:

Every family has its own dynamics.  My kid is pretty independent and let's me be.  Its my wife that can't seem to understand that I'm trying to work.

Mine too. Right up until you get on the phone. Then she's craving your undivided attention. I was just talking to my neighbor the other day who also has a four year old daughter (their birthdays are only a couple of weeks apart) and he's dealing with the same thing, so maybe it's just a this age thing.

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, kungfoodude said:

Supposedly those are not very accurate. They scrapped them here after round one of nasal swabs.

Actually, I thought it was going to be a finger prick.  Turned out that it was a vile.  Supposedly 99% accurate for Covid 19.  Asked about the finger prick and she said their accuracy was in the 80 something %  accuracy.

Will know something Tues/Wed next week

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thankful I don't have to work from home.  Tried it out one day and didn't like it.  It was more of a control thing for me though, not the actual home environment as my kids and my wife were cognisant that I was working and not there to play.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 5/6/2020 at 8:15 PM, stirs said:

The government and people chasing government handouts of billions, would never do anything shady. C'mon

Neither would the multi-millionaires cashing in said government handouts, claiming to employ those without jobs.

Edited by philit99
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, philit99 said:

Neither would the multi-millionaires cashing in said government handouts, claiming to employ those without jobs.

The small businesses, mom and pop stores that are struggling and about to go under - they really should be mad at trump and the government bailing out all these bullshit corporations. 

  • Poo 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Let's say we have a LT for 2026, because we do.  After that, let's say Ickey could be back and we would have the option of extending Walker.  That too is truth.  Don't get me wrong--I LOVE drafting OL, but drafting a first-round OT now is either wasting the money we just paid for a free agent OR it is like paying top dollar for a new car and keeping it in your garage for a season.  A first rounder should give us 4-5 years of cap relief by playing from day 1. I shall elaborate here: Teams obviously get desperate for OTs and if they enter the draft without 2 solid tackles, they are almost obligated to reach for a first round OT.  This year, I see 1 OT who is probably worth first-round consideration, and I am not putting him in the top 10 players in the draft.  Lomu, Freeling, Miller, and Proctor, for example, probably and arguably have second-round value.  So why would you reach for an OT in round 1 when you already have starters at both T positions but you have other needs? We do need depth, however, and I think there is decent OT depth that needs development on day 3. They are no slouches, by the way.   Drew Shelton (could drop to round 4): Surrendered 1 sack as Penn State's LT in 2025. 33 3/8" arms.  Pass pro improved every year (4 years--experienced).  "For a team running a zone-heavy scheme that values lateral movement and reach-blocking ability over phone-booth mauling, Shelton has real appeal. He is not a plug-and-play starter, but the athletic tools and the clear year-over-year improvement suggest a player who can develop into a capable starter if a coaching staff invests in his strength base and cleans up his technique. The ceiling depends entirely on how much stronger he can get and whether his feet can stay alive after initial contact."   Austin Barber  (could drop to round 4): I see him as a RT at best and a probable kick inside to Guard where his strengths would switch from secondary to primary tools.  Considering Lewis and Hunt may be gone in a year or two, this would give the Panthers a chance to work him at RT and then move him inside if he is not effective, and there is confidence that G may be his best position. Jude Bowery (4th round projection) was LT on a Boston College OL that was effective in the run game.  Bowery is one of the most athletic OTs in the draft.  His arms are not ideal but not too short (33.75") to play LT.  He surrendered 2 sacks. He is raw, and needs some technical refinement with his hands.  I think he has the best upside and value for this offense.   Dametrious Crownover  TexAM (5th round projection; 35 3/8" arms) is one of the more fascinating developmental tackles in this class because the physical tools are legitimately rare. A strong run blocker who should be better in pass protection with his tools.  "You do not find many 6-7, 336-pound men with that foot speed and who have the athletic background of a converted tight end. When everything clicks, he looks like a starting right tackle in a gap-heavy run scheme, smothering defenders at the point of attack and using his length to erase speed off the edge. The 2024 tape, when he anchored one of the best rushing attacks in the SEC, is the version of Crownover that gets offensive line coaches excited."  THIS is the kind of player our coaches could develop until Moton is done. Isaiah World  (Oregon, injured ACL in playoffs, 5th round projection--could slide to 6th).  World will not play much if at all in 2026, which is why he might fall.  For the Panthers' purposes, however, this would give the OL coaches time to work with him. "What made World intriguing coming out of Eugene was the untapped ceiling, a fifth-year transfer who arrived as the top-ranked offensive tackle in the portal and looked the part for stretches. The improvement he showed against Big Ten competition in his one Oregon season was real, and the physical foundation, length, athleticism, and improving technique in pass protection, is still there. The ACL tear suffered in the College Football Playoff semifinal against Indiana doesn't erase that, but it changes the conversation significantly." "That said, the investment argument isn't crazy for the right organization. This is still a tackle with first-round portal grades and the kind of athletic profile that doesn't just disappear. A team with patience and a strong offensive line room can afford to stash World on the roster, let him develop his lower-body power and pad-level consistency during the recovery process, and potentially unlock a starting-caliber right tackle somewhere in his second or third season. The path is longer now, but the destination hasn't changed for a scout willing to bet on the physical tools." You get the idea. If we do not need the OT immediately, draft one later and develop him as depth and for next season.  Most college players drafted in round 1 were not first rounders if they had entered the draft the year before,  so why not grab a player with upside?      
    • Its never the QBs fault, so if we get a new WR and he looks bad he must be a bust
    • Based on what? Its certainly not his in game coaching prowess. 
×
×
  • Create New...