IDK, all this "quoting other people's work" business seems mighty intellectual to me. Really smart people are outside of academia, where they think of smart stuff all on their own. /s
Very important point, just one technical remark, because I see this a lot: You don't necessarily want or need random samples in surveys. What you want is a probability sample, which means that you know the probability with which a person enters the sample. A random sample is a special type of probability sample, where each person has the same probability to enter the sample.
The large sample used for this "survey" in the OP is a convenience sample, which is a non-probability sample, where the persons' probabilities to enter the sample are simply unknown. And this is often not a useful basis for a survey, because it's affected by all sorts of response biases that are difficult to adjust for in non-probability samples.
BARF is an acronym for biologically appropriate raw food, which is a kind of pet diet in which owners feed their pets raw food (some pet owners swear by it, I personally think it's nonsense). This product looks like a pure supplement that is only meant to be added to raw food for extra nutrients.
As an extreme "owl", I'm also on that journey, although it remains a struggle. What helped me a lot is to set an alarm in the evening to trigger my evening routine without depending on my internal sense of time. My preference is still different, hence the struggle, but my body accommodated to the routine fairly quickly.
No downvotes from me. I cycle every day, it's my only mode of transportation, and the number of poorly adjusted lights on other people's bikes is staggering.
Because many people in the US (and elsewhere, sadly) are not media-literate enough to understand the difference between the veracity of an article and their opinion about it.
Relevant bit from the article, because some of y'all apparently comment before reading:
The staffers who resigned were all originally employees of the United States Digital Service, a technology unit established during President Obama’s second term in 2014. The unit was renamed and reorganized in January via executive order by Trump into the Musk-headed DOGE.
Although I understand this on a factual level, I still question the set of priorities that leads someone to install an operating system in order to run a single game.
Also, his wife must've been enthused to see he brought all his "performance upgrades."
IDK, all this "quoting other people's work" business seems mighty intellectual to me. Really smart people are outside of academia, where they think of smart stuff all on their own. /s