These Are the Best Labor Day Tech and Appliance Deals at Best Buy

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Labor Day sales are rolling in, and Lifehacker is sharing the best sales based on product reviews, comparisons, and price-tracking tools before they’re over. You can also subscribe to our shopping newsletter, Add to Cart, for the best sales sent to your inbox.


Amazon isn’t the only major retailer with solid Labor Day deals. Best Buy is also jumping in on the action, with deals on appliances, TVs, iPads, laptops, headphones, and more from major brands running until Sept. 1. I used price-tracking tools to make sure these tech deals are legit and made a list of the best ones to make your shopping a little easier. Here are some of the best ones so far.

4K UHD Smart webOS TV (2025)
LG – 65″ Class C5 Series OLED

LG - 65" Class C5 Series OLED


$1,496.99
at Best Buy
$2,699.99
Save $1,203.00

16GB Memory – 256GB SSD
MacBook Air 13-inch Laptop (M4)

MacBook Air 13-inch Laptop (M4)


$799.00
at Best Buy
$999.00
Save $200.00

Series Crystal UHD Smart Tizen TV (2024)
Samsung 98” Class DU9000 TV

Samsung - 98” Class DU9000


$1,899.99
at Best Buy
$2,999.99
Save $1,100.00

QLED 4K with Anti-Reflection and Slim Fit Wall Mount Included (2024)
Samsung 55” LS03D The Frame TV

Samsung - 55” Class LS03D The Frame Series QLED 4K with Anti-Reflection and Slim Fit Wall Mount Included (2024)


$899.99
at Best Buy
$1,499.99
Save $600.00

True Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds – Black
Sony WF1000XM5

Sony - WF1000XM5


$214.99
at Best Buy
$329.99
Save $115.00

Noise-Cancelling Over-the-Ear Headphones
Sony WH1000XM4 Headphones

Sony - WH1000XM4


$199.99
at Best Buy
$349.99
Save $150.00

AI 4K UHD Smart webOS (2025)
LG 48″ Class B5 Series OLED TV

LG - 48" Class B5 Series OLED AI 4K UHD Smart webOS TV (2025)


$699.99
at Best Buy
$1,299.99
Save $600.00

French Door Refrigerator in Fingerprint Resistant Stainless Steel
Whirlpool 25.2 Cu. Ft. French Door Smart Refrigerator

Whirlpool 25.2 Cu. Ft. French Door Smart Refrigerator


$1,199.99
at Best Buy
$2,399.99
Save $1,200.00

Steam and Built-In Intelligence
LG 4.5 Cu. Ft. Stackable Smart Front Load Washer

LG - 4.5 Cu. Ft. High-Efficiency Stackable Smart Front Load Washer with Steam and Built-In Intelligence


$899.99
at Best Buy
$1,299.99
Save $400.00

ColdMotion Technology
Insignia 4.1 Cu. Ft. Top Load Washer

Insignia™ - 4.1 Cu. Ft. Top Load Washer with ColdMotion Technology


$449.99
at Best Buy
$699.99
Save $250.00

The best MacBook for most people

The 13-inch M4 MacBook Air with 256GB SSD is $799 (originally $999), and it’s arguably the best option for most people. With 16GB of RAM for even the most basic MacBook Air, you’ll be able to take on intensive applications and projects now and for many years to come. It comes with a 13.6-inch “Liquid Retina” display, with a resolution of 2,560 by 1,664, a P3 wide color gamut, and a maximum brightness of 500 nits. You’ll also get an excellent backlit keyboard with Touch ID, Wi-Fi 6E support, and great speakers and microphones. Apple also decided to bring back MagSafe charging with this laptop.

Smart TVs

OLED TVs offer the best picture quality money can buy, and somehow, a highly rated OLED from 2025 is seeing one of the best discounts on TVs during the Labor Day sale. The C5 offers incredible brightness for an OLED—1,400 nits in Vivid mode—as well as accurate colors and reflection rejection, according to CNET’s review. You can get the LG 65″ Class C5 Series OLED for $1,496.99 (originally $2,699.99) and see why it’s a killer OLED deal.

It’s rare to see OLED TVs under $1,000, especially ones from the current year. The LG 48″ Class B5 Series OLED TV is $699.99 (originally $1,299.99), and it was released this summer. Yes, it’s an entry-level OLED, but it’s still an OLED, with incredible contrast, colors, processing, and gaming specs, making it a great option for those who don’t need a big TV.

If you don’t like your wall, get a 98-inch TV. The Samsung 98” Class DU9000 TV is $1,899.99 (originally $2,999.99), and as far as decent 98-inch-sized TVs go, this one offers one of the best values. It’s an LED TV with 4K, Alexa built-in, and Samsung’s own Tizen TV OS.

Samsung’s The Frame smart TVs are made to appeal to the crowd that wants a TV but doesn’t want it to dominate their decor. An anti-reflection matte display feature takes the “framed artwork” aspect to look like a framed piece of art. As the name implies, the allure of this TV is that it can double as a digital art frame, with its anti-glare matte display and customizable frame. You can get the 55” LS03D The Frame TV for $899.99 (originally $1,499.99).

Earphones

The Sony WF-1000XM5 earbuds let you fully customize their sound with various EQ and personalization options in the accompanying app, but they sound balanced and full out of the box. You also get support for the high-end LC3 and LDAC Bluetooth codecs. Their ANC is great, but what makes them special is that, unlike many other ANC earbuds, their audio quality isn’t hindered by using ANC, as noted in PCMag’s “outstanding” review. You can get them for $214.99 (originally $329.99).

If you need to get new ANC headphones but don’t want to spend an arm and a leg, consider the WH-1000XM4, going for $199 (originally $349.99). They’re not the latest version—that would be the XM6—but they’re still great headphones and plenty powerful for most people in 2025. You can read more about them in PCMag’s “outstanding” review.

Major appliances

Best Buy has great deals on major appliances, going up to 50% off, and some offering an extra 10% or 20% off. If you’re looking for a new fridge, the Whirlpool 25.2 Cu. Ft. French Door Smart Refrigerator is $1,199.99 (originally $2,399.99), one of the best fridge deals available right now.

If you’re looking for a bigger fridge, the Samsung Bespoke 30 cu. ft. 3-Door Smart Refrigerator is $1,699.99 (originally $2,429.99) and comes with an auto-fill water pitcher inside.

There are also washers with good deals. One of the standouts is the Insignia 4.1 Cu. Ft. Top Load Washer going for $449.99 (originally $699.99).

Deals are selected by our commerce team

2025 Fantasy Baseball Top 300 update: Aaron Judge clings to No. 1 spot, Yordan Alvarez returns to top 30

If you were following along with the preseason edition, here’s our regular-season top 300 overall rankings, which will be updated weekly on Mondays.

These are rest-of-season rankings for mixed 5×5 fantasy baseball leagues.

You can check out our rankings for dynasty leagues here.

2025 Fantasy Baseball Top 300 overall ranks

**Updated as of Monday, Aug 25**

Top 300 Player Team Pos Rk Aug 18
1 Aaron Judge Yankees OF 1 1
2 Shohei Ohtani Dodgers DH 1 2
3 Bobby Witt Jr. Royals SS 1 4
4 Tarik Skubal Tigers SP 1 3
5 Elly De La Cruz Reds SS 2 5
6 Corbin Carroll Diamondbacks OF 2 6
7 Jose Ramirez Guardians 3B 1 7
8 Juan Soto Mets OF 3 10
9 Gunnar Henderson Orioles SS 3 9
10 Fernando Tatis Jr. Padres OF 4 8
11 Ronald Acuna Jr. Braves OF 5 14
12 Kyle Tucker Cubs OF 6 12
13 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Blue Jays 1B 1 11
14 Julio Rodriguez Mariners OF 7 13
15 Kyle Schwarber Phillies DH 2 15
16 Manny Machado Padres 3B 2 16
17 Freddie Freeman Dodgers 1B 2 17
18 Francisco Lindor Mets SS 4 18
19 Paul Skenes Pirates SP 2 19
20 Pete Crow-Armstrong Cubs OF 8 20
21 Garrett Crochet Red Sox SP 3 22
22 Trea Turner Phillies SS 5 27
23 Logan Gilbert Mariners SP 4 23
24 Jarren Duran Red Sox OF 9 21
25 Jazz Chisholm Jr. Yankees 2B 1 26
26 Matt Olson Braves 1B 3 25
27 Bryce Harper Phillies 1B 4 28
28 James Wood Nationals OF 10 24
29 Pete Alonso Mets 1B 5 29
30 Yordan Alvarez Astros OF 11 42
31 Michael Harris II Braves OF 12 33
32 Ketel Marte Diamondbacks 2B 2 31
33 Seiya Suzuki Cubs OF 13 34
34 Wyatt Langford Rangers OF 14 40
35 CJ Abrams Nationals SS 6 35
36 Jose Altuve Astros 2B 3 36
37 Brent Rooker Athletics OF 15 37
38 Jacob deGrom Rangers SP 5 30
39 Teoscar Hernandez Dodgers OF 16 39
40 Bo Bichette Blue Jays SS 7 41
41 George Kirby Mariners SP 6 43
42 Jackson Merrill Padres OF 17 32
43 Joe Ryan Twins SP 7 38
44 Cal Raleigh Mariners C 1 45
45 Blake Snell Dodgers SP 8 51
46 Junior Caminero Rays 3B 3 47
47 Corey Seager Rangers SS 8 46
48 Hunter Brown Astros SP 9 55
49 Edwin Diaz Mets RP 1 50
50 Zach Neto Angels SS 9 49
51 Nick Kurtz Athletics 1B 6 53
52 Mike Trout Angels OF 18 44
53 Cristopher Sanchez Phillies SP 10 54
54 Jackson Chourio Brewers OF 19 129
55 Framber Valdez Astros SP 11 48
56 Mookie Betts Dodgers SS 10 52
57 Jeremy Pena Astros SS 11 56
58 Yoshinobu Yamamoto Dodgers SP 12 57
59 Cody Bellinger Yankees 1B 7 59
60 Rafael Devers Giants 3B 4 58
61 Bryan Woo Mariners SP 13 66
62 Andres Munoz Mariners RP 2 61
63 Christian Yelich Brewers OF 20 62
64 Jhoan Duran Phillies RP 3 65
65 Hunter Greene Reds SP 14 69
66 Brice Turang Brewers 2B 4 67
67 Alex Bregman Red Sox 3B 5 63
68 Logan Webb Giants SP 15 68
69 Riley Greene Tigers OF 21 73
70 Dylan Cease Padres SP 16 64
71 Josh Naylor Mariners 1B 8 60
72 Willson Contreras Cardinals C 2 70
73 Max Fried Yankees SP 17 72
74 Oneil Cruz Pirates SS 12 118
75 Tyler Glasnow Dodgers SP 18 74
76 Shota Imanaga Cubs SP 19 75
77 Chris Sale Braves SP 20 96
78 Maikel Garcia Royals 2B 5 76
79 Luis Robert Jr. White Sox OF 22 79
80 Byron Buxton Twins OF 23 77
81 Bryan Abreu Astros RP 4 80
82 Freddy Peralta Brewers SP 21 81
83 Anthony Volpe Yankees SS 13 71
84 Vinnie Pasquantino Royals 1B 9 86
85 Randy Arozarena Mariners OF 24 78
86 Daniel Palencia Cubs RP 5 83
87 Trevor Story Red Sox SS 14 91
88 Trevor Megill Brewers RP 6 85
89 Christian Walker Astros 1B 10 89
90 William Contreras Brewers C 3 90
91 Brandon Lowe Rays 2B 6 87
92 Brandon Nimmo Mets OF 25 84
93 Jeff Hoffman Blue Jays RP 7 93
94 Ian Happ Cubs OF 26 94
95 Kevin Gausman Blue Jays SP 22 95
96 Dylan Crews Nationals OF 27 99
97 Cade Smith Guardians RP 8 92
98 Salvador Perez Royals C 4 97
99 Alec Bohm Phillies 3B 6 101
100 Roman Anthony Red Sox OF 28 112
101 Carlos Rodon Yankees SP 23 100
102 Jesus Luzardo Phillies SP 24 107
103 Raisel Iglesias Braves RP 9 105
104 Shane Bieber Blue Jays SP 25 150
105 Bryan Reynolds Pirates OF 29 109
106 Andy Pages Dodgers OF 30 108
107 Brandon Woodruff Brewers SP 26 103
108 Josh Lowe Rays OF 31 110
109 Nick Pivetta Padres SP 27 114
110 Brenton Doyle Rockies OF 32 151
111 Steven Kwan Guardians OF 33 102
112 Ezequiel Tovar Rockies SS 15 115
113 Nolan McLean Mets SP 28 168
114 Jordan Westburg Orioles 2B 7 82
115 Lawrence Butler Athletics OF 34 106
116 Sonny Gray Cardinals SP 29 113
117 Bryce Miller Mariners SP 30 111
118 Tyler Soderstrom Athletics 1B 11 130
119 Robbie Ray Giants SP 31 88
120 Willy Adames Giants SS 16 120
121 Kodai Senga Mets SP 32 116
122 Eugenio Suarez Mariners 3B 7 123
123 Nico Hoerner Cubs 2B 8 122
124 Robert Suarez Padres RP 10 121
125 Yandy Diaz Rays 1B 12 125
126 Kenley Jansen Angels RP 11 117
127 George Springer Blue Jays OF 35 145
128 Gleyber Torres Tigers 2B 9 126
129 Michael Busch Cubs 1B 13 127
130 Pete Fairbanks Rays RP 12 128
131 Adolis Garcia Rangers OF 36 182
132 Carlos Estevez Royals RP 13 131
133 Chandler Simpson Rays OF 37 137
134 Marcell Ozuna Braves DH 3 124
135 Nathan Eovaldi Rangers SP 33 140
136 Ceddanne Rafaela Red Sox SS 17 133
137 Xavier Edwards Marlins SS 18 119
138 Sean Manaea Mets SP 34 136
139 Aroldis Chapman Red Sox RP 14 166
140 Nick Castellanos Phillies OF 38 132
141 Matthew Boyd Cubs SP 35 135
142 Luke Keaschall Twins 2B 10 143
143 Ranger Suarez Phillies SP 36 149
144 Jung Hoo Lee Giants OF 39 146
145 Matt Chapman Giants 3B 8 240
146 David Bednar Yankees RP 15 134
147 Addison Barger Blue Jays 3B 9 147
148 Xander Bogaerts Padres SS 19 148
149 Clayton Kershaw Dodgers SP 37 154
150 Wilyer Abreu Red Sox OF 40 141
151 Tanner Bibee Guardians SP 38 144
152 Royce Lewis Twins 3B 10 152
153 Max Scherzer Blue Jays SP 39 157
154 Trevor Rogers Orioles SP 40 209
155 Taylor Ward Angels OF 41 153
156 Will Smith Dodgers C 5 155
157 Jacob Misiorowski Brewers SP 41 138
158 Spencer Strider Braves SP 42 98
159 Noelvi Marte Reds 3B 11 162
160 Jo Adell Angels OF 42 163
161 Edward Cabrera Marlins SP 43 159
162 Geraldo Perdomo Diamondbacks SS 20 179
163 Daulton Varsho Blue Jays OF 43 167
164 Dansby Swanson Cubs SS 21 161
165 Jacob Wilson Athletics SS 22 214
166 Jurickson Profar Braves OF 44 230
167 Michael King Padres SP 44 190
168 Kerry Carpenter Tigers OF 45 165
169 Shea Langeliers Athletics C 6 169
170 Jackson Holliday Orioles 2B 11 164
171 Chris Bassitt Blue Jays SP 45 173
172 Spencer Torkelson Tigers 1B 14 175
173 Tommy Edman Dodgers 2B 12 198
174 Trent Grisham Yankees OF 46 174
175 Shohei Ohtani Dodgers SP 46 170
176 Masyn Winn Cardinals SS 23 158
177 Luis Gil Yankees SP 47 186
178 Spencer Steer Reds 1B 15 171
179 Eury Perez Marlins SP 48 177
180 TJ Friedl Reds OF 47 176
181 David Peterson Mets SP 49 191
182 Jesus Sanchez Astros OF 48 172
183 Ben Rice Yankees C 7 193
184 Tanner Scott Dodgers RP 16 205
185 MacKenzie Gore Nationals SP 50 180
186 Samuel Bassallo Orioles C 8 196
187 Mark Vientos Mets 3B 12 NR
188 Ozzie Albies Braves 2B 13 156
189 Dennis Santana Pirates RP 17 189
190 Jonathan India Royals 2B 14 187
191 Cade Horton Cubs SP 51 227
192 Andrew Vaughn Brewers 1B 16 178
193 Ivan Herrera Cardinals C 9 184
194 Dylan Beavers Orioles OF 49 194
195 Heliot Ramos Giants OF 50 183
196 Luis Garcia Jr. Nationals 2B 15 192
197 Quinn Priester Brewers SP 52 188
198 Yainer Diaz Astros C 10 185
199 Gavin Williams Guardians SP 53 199
200 Kyle Bradish Orioles SP 54 215
201 Seth Lugo Royals SP 55 202
202 Pablo Lopez Twins SP 56 225
203 Sal Frelick Brewers OF 51 207
204 Lars Nootbaar Cardinals OF 52 222
205 Nick Lodolo Reds SP 57 233
206 Nathaniel Lowe Red Sox 1B 17 262
207 Ryan Mountcastle Orioles 1B 18 279
208 Adrian Houser Rays SP 58 195
209 Ramon Laureano Padres OF 53 204
210 Nestor Cortes Padres SP 59 208
211 Colton Cowser Orioles OF 54 236
212 Sandy Alcantara Marlins SP 60 253
213 Randy Rodriguez Giants RP 18 139
214 Luis Arraez Padres 2B 16 203
215 Hunter Goodman Rockies C 11 213
216 Colt Keith Tigers 2B 17 210
217 Giancarlo Stanton Yankees DH 55 228
218 Jordan Beck Rockies OF 56 201
219 Jordan Lawler Diamondbacks SS 24 230
220 Drake Baldwin Braves C 12 206
221 Austin Hays Reds OF 57 212
222 Bryson Stott Phillies 2B 18 226
223 Lourdes Gurriel Jr. Diamondbacks OF 58 248
224 Alec Burleson Cardinals OF 59 211
225 Jakob Marsee Marlins OF 60 219
226 Brendan Donovan Cardinals 2B 19 218
227 Miguel Andujar Reds 3B 13 216
228 Cedric Mullins Mets OF 61 224
229 Cole Ragans Royals SP 61 247
230 Ryan Pepiot Rays SP 62 223
231 Ryan O’Hearn Padres 1B 19 231
232 Jasson Dominguez Yankees OF 62 181
233 Devin Williams Yankees RP 19 252
234 Merrill Kelly Rangers SP 63 232
235 Josh Jung Rangers 3B 14 256
236 Aaron Nola Phillies SP 64 234
237 Tyler Freeman Rockies OF 63 235
238 Jac Caglianone Royals 1B 20 241
239 Shane Baz Rays SP 65 217
240 Luis Castillo Mariners SP 66 221
241 J.T. Realmuto Phillies C 13 245
242 Jack Flaherty Tigers SP 67 237
243 Brayan Bello Red Sox SP 68 261
244 Mason Miller Padres RP 20 200
245 Tyler O’Neill Orioles OF 64 243
246 Agustin Ramirez Marlins C 14 255
247 Yusei Kikuchi Angels SP 69 295
248 Clay Holmes Mets SP 70 257
249 Ke’Bryan Hayes Reds 3B 15 287
250 Hurston Waldrep Braves SP 71 293
251 Jose A. Ferrer Nationals RP 21 297
252 Will Warren Yankees SP 72 254
253 Kyle Finnegan Tigers RP 22 244
254 Parker Messick Guardians SP 73 NR
255 Carlos Correa Astros SS 25 260
256 Yu Darvish Padres SP 74 280
257 Drew Rasmussen Rays SP 75 250
258 Cam Schlitter Yankees SP 76 299
259 Carson Montgomery White Sox SS 26 NR
260 Emilio Pagan Reds RP 23 238
261 Matt Shaw Cubs 3B 16 246
262 Andrew Abbott Reds SP 77 268
263 Phil Maton Rangers RP 24 267
264 Ian Seymour Rays SP 78 NR
265 C.J. Kayfus Guardians 1B 21 284
266 Zebby Matthews Twins SP 79 269
267 Lenyn Sosa White Sox 2B 20 273
268 Brett Baty Mets 2B 21 281
269 Andres Gimenez Blue Jays 2B 22 265
270 Will Vest Tigers RP 25 282
271 Gavin Lux Reds 2B 23 278
272 Jake Cronenworth Padres 2B 24 276
273 Riley O’Brien Cardinals RP 26 292
274 Brandon Pfaadt Diamondbacks SP 80 274
275 Paul Goldschmidt Yankees 1B 22 275
276 Brooks Lee Twins SS 27 NR
277 Kyle Manzardo Guardians 1B 23 270
278 Jack Leiter Rangers SP 81 NR
279 Justin Verlander Giants SP 82 286
280 Gabriel Moreno Diamondbacks C 15 NR
281 Tommy Pham Pirates OF 65 NR
282 Jonah Tong Mets SP 83 NR
283 Cam Smith Astros 3B 17 229
284 Bubba Chandler Pirates SP 84 NR
285 Isaac Collins Brewers OF 66 283
286 Cristian Javier Astros SP 85 289
287 Ha-Seong Kim Rays SS 28 197
288 Logan O’Hoppe Angels C 16 264
289 Joc Pederson Rangers DH 4 NR
290 Alex Vesia Dodgers RP 27 285
291 Zac Gallen Diamondbacks SP 86 291
292 Brandon Marsh Phillies OF 67 294
293 Jeff McNeil Mets 2B 25 NR
294 Kyle Teel White Sox C 17 NR
295 Calvin Faucher Marlins RP 28 298
296 Casey Mize Tigers SP 87 272
297 Victor Vodnik Rockies RP 29 300
298 Brady Singer Reds SP 88 NR
299 Ryan Walker Giants RP 30 NR
300 Ryan McMahon Yankees 3B 18 266

Aug. 25 Notes

– Dropping off the list: Austin Riley (104th), Marcus Semien (142nd), Adley Rutschman (160th), Evan Carter (220th), Landen Roupp (242nd), Michael Conforto (249th), Jacob López (251st), Matt Wallner (258th), Nolan Schanuel (259th), Joe Boyle (263rd), Matt McLain (271st), Francsico Alvarez (277th), Jordan Walker (288th), Jake Burger (290th), Eric Lauer (296th)

– I considered a change at the top this week, given that Aaron Judge hasn’t been quite his usual self since returning from his elbow injury. However, he seems mostly recovered now; his first 10 days back were bad, but he’s sporting a .436 xwOBA in his last 50 plate appearances.

– It’s Crap on Anthony Volpe Week, as if the Yankees have three better shortstops they could have been playing all along. Volpe’s defensive regression is a serious long-term concern and he definitely hasn’t progressed as hoped offensively, but he’s certainly had some bad luck this season and the idea that he’s been a disaster is overblown. He has the very worst BABIP (.238) among qualified hitters even though his exit velocity numbers are the best of his career (he has a 10% barrel rate and a 43% hard-hit rate). He’s on pace to finish with 22 homers and 81 RBI in spite of his struggles, and while had that odd rash of caught stealings early on, he’s 7-for7 in that department the last two months. As ugly as these last two weeks have been, he’s still a perfectly reasonable fantasy option as long as the Yankees stick with him, which they probably will after a two-day break.

– Since returning from his hamstring strain, Jordan Lawlar is hitting .306/.359/.500 with two steals in eight games for Triple-A Reno. He should be up Sept. 1 to play regularly for the Diamondbacks for the rest of the season. He’s at No. 219 right now, and he’ll jump into the 160-180 range once he gets the call.

– His xwOBA was already trending up, but I felt I had to drop Mark Vientos from the rankings entirely last week after he started just one of six games from Aug. 10-16. Now, of course, he’s started nine in a row and hit three homers in two games over the weekend. He’s a mixed-league guy while playing regularly.

– Mets prospect Jonah Tong debuts at No. 282 after again pitching scoreless ball in his second Triple-A start Saturday. He’s fanned 17 in 11 2/3 shutout innings since moving up from Double-A, where he had a 1.59 ERA and a 162/44 K/BB in 102 innings. It’s getting pretty easy to imagine the Mets soon squeezing him into a six-man rotation.

Mets’ Jose Siri set to take big step towards potential late-season return

Jose Siri is set to take a big step towards a potential late-season return to the Mets.

The speedy outfielder will officially begin a rehab assignment with the Low-A squad down in Port St. Lucie later this week. 

Siri has been sidelined since April 12 due to a fractured left tibia.

He appeared to be closing in on a return late last month, but hit a bit of a setback in his recovery when imaging showed the bone hadn’t healed to the Mets’ liking.

Instead, he ended up being shut down from all baseball activities until he was finally able to ramp things back up over the past couple of weeks.

Having missed so much time, though, Carlos Mendoza expects Siri to still be a couple weeks away.

“This is a guy who has been out pretty much the whole year,” the skipper said. “He’ll start playing every other day and then the next week we’ll start moving him up, but we have to see the full nine innings, back-to-backs, we gotta get the volume up.”

The team still hasn’t discussed Siri’s exact role when he is eventually ready to return.

The most logical fit would seemingly be as an extra outfielder and speedster off the bench with them being able to add two players when roster expand in September. 

Siri was expected to split time with Tyrone Taylor in center after being acquired in an offseason deal with the Tampa Bay Rays, but the early injury quickly forced him to the sidelines. 

Taylor filled in tremendously over the first few weeks, but after he ultimately struggled the team turned to Jeff McNeil out there and then acquired Cedric Mullins in a deadline deal with the Orioles.

Mullins has picked things up with the bat after a bit of a slow start with the new club, but his defense has left much to be desired.

Siri’s return could provide a much-needed boost with his dynamic speed and outfield defense in the latter innings.

Four Ways to More Seamlessly Set Up Multiple Monitors for Your Mac

Multiple monitors are great, but you can’t just plug them in—you have to configure them. This is true with all computers, Macs included.

For example: There is nothing more confusing than moving your mouse pointer past the right side of the screen only for it to show up on a monitor that’s to the left of it. This happens because your computer has no idea where you’re monitors physically are—you have to tell it.

The good news is that configuring this, and changing other potentially annoying things about using multiple monitors with your Mac, isn’t particularly hard. Here are some tips to get you started.

Arrange your displays

Open the System Settings app and click the Displays button in the left sidebar. From here you can configure things like the resolution for each of your displays.

The Displays section of the System Settings app

Credit: Justin Pot

If you see the same thing on both displays, you should start by making sure the displays are Extended instead of Mirroring—you can do this using the Use as drop-down menu toward the top. Once that is sorted out you can use the Arrange button. This will show all of your currently connected displays as boxes you can move.

The Arrange screen, with boxes you can drag to position your displays.

Credit: Justin Pot

Organize the boxes so that they are in the same relative place as your displays. I, for example, tend to have my laptop on my desk right below my monitor, so I drag the display below the large display as shown above. The trick is to make sure that moving your mouse pointer between screens feels natural—give yourself a few tries until you get things right. Note that, by default, only your primary display will have a menu bar. You can drag the menu bar from one display to another in order to change which display is primary, if that matters to you.

One thing I’ve noticed is that a disparity in resolution can make things feel disjointed. If one monitor is set to a high pixel density while another is not, a window you drag from one to the other might be a radically different size. Adjust things until it all feels natural.

Your Mac saves different configurations depending on whether a particular external display is connected. This means that adjusting the resolution of the built-in laptop display while connected to a monitor doesn’t change how it works while unplugged. I find this useful because I like having lots of workspace while using my laptop away from my desk, so I tend to use a higher resolution that way. While at my desk, though, I sit a little further from my display, so I prefer that everything be a bit bigger. The way the settings works means this all happens seamlessly.

Break up Mission Control

If you’re a big user of Mission Control, the Mac feature that allows you to have multiple virtual desktops with their own windows, you might find the way this feature works with multiple monitors a bit annoying. Changing desktops on one monitor also changes desktops on the other. There are pros and cons to this, granted, but I prefer it when switching on one monitor leaves the other static. I also really hate how using an app in full screen on one monitor leaves the other display as blacked out unless I also put a full screen app there.

Happily there is an option to fix this, one I think you should try if frustrated. In System Settings click Desktop & Dock in the sidebar and scroll down to the Mission Control section. Check the Displays have separate spaces toggle.

The hard-to-find "Displays have separate spaces" option in System Settings

Credit: Justin Pot

You will need to log in and out of your account—or restart your Mac—in order for this change to apply, but when you do, you’ll find that each display has its own spaces.

One thing to note is that doing this results in a menu bar showing up on all of your displays. I personally think this is also an improvement (but it’s a little annoying that you can’t configure whether menu bars show up on both displays without changing how Mission Control works).

Use your iPad as another screen

An iPad serving as a second display for Mac

Credit: Khamosh Pathak

My collegue Khamosh wrote about using your iPad as another Mac display, and it’s a really handy way to get a little bit more screen real estate. All you need to get started as an iPad signed into the same iCloud account as you. Do that, and leave the iPad near your laptop, and you should see it as a potential Display option in the display settings. This can be nice while on the road—it turns your iPad into a portable monitor.

Take control over where your dock is

Your dock’s position while using multiple monitors isn’t fixed. If you’ve set one display to be primary, the dock will be on that display, unless there’s another display adjacent to where the dock would be.

This is a bit confusing, but stay with me. If you’ve got your dock set to show up on the left side, for example, but there’s a display to the left of your primary display, the dock will move all the way to the left. This is to prevent the dock from showing up in the middle of your various displays.

A screenshot of the application HiDock for Mac

Credit: Justin Pot

If you’d rather take direct control over how your dock behaves while using mutiple displays, try HiDock. This application, which is one of the apps you should install if you use multiple monitors, lets you configure where the dock should show up depending on whether or not you’re using multiple monitors. It’s a nice bit of added flexibility, so check it out if you’re consistently annoyed by how the dock works after plugging in your monitor.