Free from outside dangers, nurseries represent a sheltered environment that’s ideal for budding plants, smiling newborns, and potato chips that resemble celebrities. Safeguard tender offspring with today's Groupon: for $15, you get $30 worth of baby clothes, toys, and accessories at My Baby News. This Groupon is valid at the Santa Rosa and Petaluma locations.
My Baby News accents youthful vigor with equally vivacious merchandise, swaddling toddlers in cozy linens and equipping parents with educational, entertaining, and practical childcare products. Prepare curious crawlers for tapestry exploration by cloaking scampering limbs in a Baby Soy Kimono one-piece ($25), or shield big baby blues from distracting drool glare with Baby Banz Adventure sunglasses ($17). Evenflo Jenny Jump Up ($24.99) supplies rebellious tots with the tools to fight the gravity-powers-that-be, fully surrounding and supporting frames for snug buoyancy. To keep track of a tot’s many milestones, the shop also stocks C.R. Gibson First Year Calendar, complete with milestone stickers ($14).
My Baby News lists a majority of in-store items in its online catalog, providing a digital window to its analog world of giggle-inducing goods. Customers can return products within 30 days for in-store credit.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: High-Tech Piracy
The term pirate often calls to mind images of seafaring roustabouts, jauntily crossing blades, smuggling saltwater rum, and trading boisterous barbs via sassy parrots. High-tech piracy is a wholly different industry that has grown since the military accidentally released computers into our ecosystem. What are today's most common forms of high-tech piracy?
DVD Piracy: Using a tiny laser in their computers, mischievous pirates are now able to "burn" DVDs, which renders many of the scenes unplayable and thus prevents future Netflix subscribers from finding out whether or not it was an acceptable country for old men.
Vegetable Piracy: Though honest, hard-working people pay full price for their produce, there is a more nefarious segment of the population that takes that potato home, downloads it into some rich topsoil, and makes free copies for all their friends.
Tracing Paper: Aspiring artists looking for a shortcut to success should be forewarned—intellectual-property theft never pays, no matter how cool Snoopy looks driving that fire truck.
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