Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/Scouted/AmazonScouting Report: Forget all of the other toys I have for my dog, this one keeps her occupied for as long as I need her to be.Sometimes, it feels like my dog is the only one who misbehaves during Zoom calls. And then I call my mom. No but for real, my dog is a little bit of a disaster. She just wants attention, to play, but during the workday, and especially when I’m on a Zoom call, I can’t be that for her (sidenote: she also has Zoom fatigue). I’ve tried toys and treats, but recently, I got her this, and I wish I had gotten it way sooner.Buy on Amazon, $15The Lickimat isn’t a dog toy—it’s a lifesaver, and I’m not being hyperbolic when I say that. Unlike other toys that you can put food in or around, like Kongs, I like how this stays flat and for the most part, can be kept in its designated area. It even has pads on the bottom that help keep it in place on my wood floors, so my dog isn
Simple Tips To Avoid Telecalling Fatigue Published: - May 24, 2021
Virtual interactions are taxing on our brains in a whole new way. As a result, there is physical and psychological exhaustion that goes along with this phenomenon.
The Woman Post | Carolina Rodríguez Monclou
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Since the beginning of the pandemic, there has been an increased use of online video platforms like Zoom. With this comes a noticeable negative after effect where extreme fatigue is experienced.
Worse for Women?
According to researchers from Stanford University, this condition is more apparent and reportedly worse in women.
Zooming in on Watershed s new album, Elephant in the Room The popular local band found inspiration in the lockdown to create tracks that reflect the times we re living in. Frontman Craig Hinds tells us more Watershed s frontman Craig Hinds. Image: Andrew Gorman
As Zoom fatigue sets in for many people, the thought of another work meeting held over the app is enough to make them roll their eyes. Creativity , collaboration those are often the words used to describe a sense of what s been lost without face-to-face interaction with colleagues.
But for the guys from Watershed, Zoom was the only way to communicate while they were putting together their seventh studio album during a large part of last year.
The Atlantic
Adam Maida / The Atlantic / Getty
My most intimate relationship of 2020 was with the internet. I did my job online, and talked to my friends online, and streamed hundreds of hours of TV that I’d already seen online, just to fill my empty apartment with human sounds. I used the internet to put scary Instagram filters on my face, and join a mutual-aid Slack group, and reflexively refresh the coronavirus case count in my zip code, and attend my cousin’s wedding, and blog about a parasocial relationship with an online Pilates instructor.
I know I’m not alone in feeling that the internet has become even more vital than it was before the pandemic began, when it was already pretty vital. Adults talked, last year, about discovering TikTok for the first time, and using it to soothe the anxieties instigated by everything else. They also Zoomed and Zoomed and Zoomed, and then discussed “Zoom fatigue,” or “video vertigo,” defined as “a downward spiral that comes f
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