elsuakned
elsuakned t1_j4t5vpq wrote
Reply to comment by zlaw32 in NFC East becomes first division since 2002 realignment to have three teams advance to divisional round by RollingMoss1
History doesn't mean much. Giants had 6 losing seasons out of the seven years before 2020, Commanders five of the last seven. Before this weekend the cowboys had won two playoff games in the past decade. They have not been one of the best divisions in football for quite awhile now, and all four figuring out their issues and putting together decent seasons, with two playoff wins and a bye, is not some expectation.
elsuakned t1_j2evaac wrote
Reply to comment by morold in Eli5 How exactly does Noise cancellation work? That too in such small airbuds by Professional-Ad3441
I think this would be a similar question to asking "do my headphones die faster if I listen to things louder", which I don't think is a big enough effect to worry people, I've never heard of it anyways. There's pretty much never not sound. Surely headphones have a lower level of reception or tolerance where it doesn't bother or can't pick up those noises, but it would always need to be listening and ready to generate them, so whether it does and how much it does seems like it'd be the smaller part of the process
elsuakned t1_j2eugpj wrote
Reply to comment by Hyjynx75 in ELI5. Why is honey and lemon a popular cure for cold like symptoms. What makes lemon more effective than say an orange or lime? by alexkid_in_realworld
I'm surprised it took so long to find your bottom two paragraphs lol. Hot drinks are great when you're sick. Is someone tryna put oranges or limes in their tea?
elsuakned t1_jaemtv5 wrote
Reply to comment by SplodyPants in ELI5- Given the average cost of a cup of coffee is marked up about ~80%, why hasn’t a company come in and charge significantly less to take a greater share of the market? by Educational_Sir3783
Maybe mom and pop shops can beat them when it comes to black coffee, but I can think of one small place I've ever been to where anything beyond that saves money, it's usually the opposite. Those lattes and shit are not cheap even when the big places can buy the actually valuable ingredients at high scales. And I'm pretty sure that one place that competed was campus subsidized. It was also not good coffee.
Iirc the local place I went to back when I lived nearby sold black coffee at about 70 cents cheaper for a large cup, and being the local place with maybe three employees ever on at a time in a liberal neighborhood, was absolutely packed during any rush time. That 70 cents isn't going to kill Dunkin, their convenience, familiarity, app preorders, bigger menu, often ideal locations for being on the go, etc. I believe the local place near me now is more expensive than dunkin, so it's not even assured that local places can even try that.
There's a demographic of people who want a local place that is cheap and familiar to them, but there's a much, much larger one that wants the convenience of a chain, or if not that a place that specializes in gourmet coffee like a roaster, which also isn't going to be cheap. And if people are super money conscious, they'll make coffee at home, or gas station coffee on the go, which isn't all awful. A coffee place at a cheaper price point than what's out there right now doesn't seem very viable at all.