Being home all the time has been hard on your house, too.
Instead, consider investing your time in small projects that have big-gratification appeal. None of these five chores take more than an hour, and each ends with that satisfying thought:
Why didn’t I do that sooner? Best of all, unlike the dishes and the bottomless laundry pile, these chores won’t need to be done again for many months.
Deep-clean Your Bed
“You know that feeling when you get into a bed with clean sheets? This is that feeling times 10,” said Brandi Broxson, a senior editor at Real Simple magazine
Seyfarth Synopsis: Effective January 26, 2021, all international passengers (with minor exceptions) traveling by air must provide a negative COVID-19 viral test to enter the U.S..
WINNIPEG Pharmascience Inc. is recalling 13 lots of its store-brand 75 mg ranitidine products after tests found above-average levels of NDMA, a probable human carcinogen. Ranitidine is used in over the counter products to prevent and treat heartburn associated with acid indigestion and sour stomach. In September 2019, Health Canada directed companies to stop distributing ranitidine products because tests were showing the presence of the NDMA impurity. The organization has since allowed companies to resume selling ranitidine products providing they routinely test all batches throughout the product’s shelf life. Health Canada recommends people taking ranitidine products speak to their healthcare provider about alternative, non-ranitidine treatment options.
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CDC: All Air Passengers Traveling From the U.K. to the U.S. Must Have Proof of a Negative COVID-19 Test Monday, December 28, 2020
On December 25, 2020, in an effort to mitigate the potential spread of a new variant of the coronavirus that has been found in the U.K., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued an order requiring proof of a pre-departure, negative COVID-19 test result for all airline passengers including U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents traveling from the U.K. to the U.S. The test must be a viral test that was conducted on a specimen collected during the three calendar days preceding the flight’s departure (Qualifying Test). The order is effective as of December 27, 2020, at 7:01 p.m. ET.
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The FBI, CISA and the ODNI are leading the U.S. government s response to the apparent cyberespionage operation that backdoored the widely used SolarWinds Orion network monitoring software.
American technology giants Cisco and Intel are among the thousands of organizations that have been affected by the supply chain attack targeting software vendor SolarWinds and, by extension, its customers.
The attack campaign, which was first revealed Sunday by FireEye, one of its victims, centers on the Orion network monitoring software from SolarWinds, a technology firm based in Austin, Texas, that until recently had a valuation of about $1 billion.
While SolarWinds may be relatively unknown, the company has 300,000 customers, of which nearly 18,000 may have been caught up in the supply chain attack, which involved attackers adding a backdoor to the company s Orion software, apparently by having infiltrated its software development pipeline (see: