Firstly, do you have a family? And by family, I really mean dependents. In other words, if you do have a spouse, can she/he get by without any substantial income provided by you? If no, then yeah, you need to keep a "real" job that provides stable income. If you have children, then the answer is pretty obvious.
If you are single or have a working spouse and no kids, then I'm going to go against some of the others here and say dive right in and go for it. If you have even something like $5-10k saved, you should be able to survive on that for a couple of months if you scrimp. Or you could consider some angel/seed funding a la the popular Y Combinator route.
The reason being is that in times of an economic downturn, everyone will recommend you avoid taking risk. However, this means that you will have fewer and fewer competitors and your odds of getting a bigger payoff increase. The common advice is to see what the crowds are doing, and do the opposite.
You hit the nail on the head in that you won't be able to focus 100% on your baby if you have a day job. I'm kind of in a similar boat, and my project is going by agonizingly slow.
Bottom line is that even if your startup fails, you'll have a significant advantage on a resume that others do not: you created and ran a company. Provided you are talented (and if you can get a company off the ground and release a product, you probably are), getting a job to pay back whatever debt you incurred, even in these times, is not that difficult.