Shopping In Target During The Early Reopening Vibes - Plus Their Makeover (Tip: Don't Go On The Weekends)

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Desperate times called for desperate measures. My daughter had completed a lot of jobs around the house to earn enough money to order two outfits from the Target brand American Girl Doll series, Our Generation. Persistently, she earned the money, researched the outfits, and had us place the order online for curbside pickup at Target. Finally it arrived via email notification, and it was ready for pickup. Trouble is, we weren’t ready to drive up to the store in Poughkeepsie until days later, and that’s when the next email came in on a Sunday: “You missed your pickup window, and your items have been placed back on the shelf, and your order refunded.”

#ParentFail. The Sunday that the refund email came, I got into the car and headed up Route 9, mask and wipes in hand, to go inside of Target to get those outfits back off the shelf. At the time, Target had a corner in the front of the store that contained bags of orders, similar to how they do it at Christmas when orders from other stores get shipped to yours for pickup. This corner has since been replaced with swimwear, but at the time, it’s what a store associate searched through to find the outfits.

The outfits weren’t there, so I went deeper into the store, all the way to the Kid section, to sadly not find those outfits, but did find two others that would work. It was 6pm on a Sunday, and foot traffic in the store was low. Social distancing felt fine. In the name of journalism, I headed back to Target the following Sunday at 2:30pm to test a busier time, days after the May 15th Reopening Day in New York.

Social distancing had gone out the window at Poughkeepsie’s Target. Being used to Beacon’s vibe of politely moving out of the way for each other in the social distance dance, this two-step wasn’t really happening here, yet. There were some COVID-19 changes, however.

Clothing, Beauty and Book Isles Are More Spacious

Target in Poughkeepsie used to have some very cramped clothing isles. So cramped in fact, that a Target shopping cart wouldn’t fit through. Those isles have since been cleared out a bit, and the feeling is more breathable. The Beauty section has been opened up, where once it too had corners so tight, the cart would barely turn the corner. The books, which were crammed into the back of the Electronic section, have been brought out more into the Toy section, so browsing through them is easier and more spacious.

The entire Sports section has been moved and replaced with Pets, yet in the back corner of the store, which is usually reserved for changing seasons (think Back To School, Christmas Decorations, Patio Furniture) also has more room to browse. When asked if these more spacious changes were COVID-19 related, a store associate answered that they were planned in the works the before the pandemic hit, and just happened to be COVID-19 friendly. ALBB has not confirmed with Target Corporate yet to see if this layout change really was a coincidence, but if we get confirmation, this article will be updated.

The main isle of Target is still crowded, with people moving in any direction, not minding how close they are moving past each other. Another citizen shopper reports in to A Little Beacon Blog that at Adams, just down the Route 9 strip, isles have been marked with direction arrows, and the number of people allowed into the store at Adams has been limited.

Masks and Cleaning Inside Of Target

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Signs posted at the entrance tell everyone to wear a mask inside of Target. Most everyone had one on, and at one point, an announcement came over the loud-speaker, thanking people for their cooperation in wearing masks, and to continue doing so.

Target associates have been assigned to cleaning surfaces of the drink refrigerators and shopping carts. Meanwhile, up the parking ramp at Best Buy, that retail location remains closed to the public, but with curb-side pickup that has been happening since the shut-down. In-home installations, however, have resumed. For example, if you buy a stove from Best Buy, their team can come in and install it for you.

As of this post (5/19/2020), Starbucks inside of Target remained closed.

Overall, the vibe at Target was crowded. If social distancing is important to you, and you don’t want to leave feeling like you need to take a shower, then you’ll want to go at off-times, like in the morning during a weekday. This writer did take a shower after the afternoon trip on Sunday. There were too many people.

The Internet Is Getting Overloaded. Netflix Limits Streaming In Europe To Preserve Bandwidth

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When you started working from home, you may have thought that your Internet was glitchy. Your kids may have been throwing fits at the Xbox because it kept skipping. You are not alone. The Internet is getting clogged because none of us want to be alone. We are all connecting at once through Zoom, Google Classroom, GoToWebinar, Live Instagram/Facebook/Twitter/YouTube, streaming videos on YouTube. Streaming shows on Netflix, Hulu, Disney+. Press conferences. So much streaming.

Netflix announced today (3/19/2020) that it will limit streaming in Europe. This has been a discussion for a while over there, as people are having trouble uploading and downloading content.

As reported by Deadline: “The European Union’s Internal Market and Services Commissioner, Thierry Breton, has called on streaming platforms such as Netflix and YouTube to take measures to prevent internet gridlock as the response to the coronavirus places additional strain on communications networks.”

More from the article: “In a call placed Wednesday, he urged Netflix CEO Reed Hastings to serve only standard-definition content to users in times of peak demand. With vast numbers of people now working from home, and using video chat and digital messages to stay in touch with friends and family, and as users increase their time spent on streaming platforms, Breton said streamers had a role to play in ensuring telecom operators weren’t overwhelmed.”

Please read the full article here, but please use these ideas to conserve and free up the Internet. The goal is to spread out our global usage of the Internet. We need the videos from you! From our teachers, our fitness studios, everyone who is doing creative things to try to stay in business digitally.

  • Try to check your social at certain times of the day. Not all day.

  • Maybe don’t make live videos all day. Maybe don’t watch the live videos. Every single person coming on there is contributing to bandwidth usage. I want everyone to make live videos so badly, but maybe we just need to limit it at certain times.

  • Music: If you stream music from Apple or Spotify or something, just go buy some albums from iTunes. Put a bunch of the CDs in your basement onto your computer (OK, that’s from my own to-do list because I’ve never been a music streamer… I never trusted the cloud! ‘Clouds can blow away,’ is what I always said, though I subscribe to a bunch of them…keep your subscriptions! We will emerge from this.)

  • Limit kid video playdates to certain times.

  • Having a lot of meetings on Zoom? Maybe tell your boss that you need to conserve teleconferencing bandwidth. GoToWebinar is already very slow at times (worked great when it worked, just took a while for it to start) and I have been hearing that downloading Zoom is taking a long time. Sorry, Boss!

  • Not sure if these work, but: close unused tabs in your browser and on your phone. Don’t use these and reminder placeholders anymore.

  • If a press conference is happening right now, maybe watch it later. Not live. (Or watch on regular TV instead of streaming.)

  • Get cable! I was never a cord-cutter. I always knew that streaming would get expensive because we’d be signing up for so many services! So get that cable box back, LOL! (But to be honest, I don’t know the technology of cable; it might all run on WiFi anyway at this point.)

  • Turn the TV off when you leave the room.

  • Close browser tabs when you’re done with them.