GarrettDavis
Garrett Davis
GarrettDavis

Wish I could star this more

I don’t recall saying whether I agreed with his point or not, in fact I never argued either way. I just made a comment on the scope of the article. Again, more assumptions on your part.

I’m assuming you don’t know this guy, and that’s an awful lot of very specific assumptions about a person you know nothing about.

Have you driven one? Sure, they’re no Miata, but they’re still very chuckable and surprisingly neutral in corners. Still very much a sports car.

T-top 300ZX owner here, and mine legit do not leak :)

Nice Price! Though, I should say I’m a little biased on the subject...

Now playing

No joke, his death metal version of House of the Rising Sun is legitimately a great listen:

Just read the title:

If there’s one thing I’ve learned about Google: They know that people will only use their services as long as they are better than the rest. They have massive incentive to make their products as user friendly and pro-consumer as possible, because that is exactly how they lock down the market share they do. This is

That’s what I got from it as well.

Well, the entire point of the article was to counter what had been said previously on Foxtrot; that carriers are easy to sink.

And no one says a word about the people driving slightly older Subarus, or V6 sedans or sports cars that get the same or worse mileage. A new F-150 gets better mileage than my 300ZX or my Allroad, and yet people wouldn’t even think to call me out on my gas guzzlers.

Nice. Would be more fitting on a sports car, but yeah, I’d say that’s a good one

Da, komrade. Da.

Took me a second, but that one is pretty damn clever.

That’s fucking great.

The funny thing is though, is that giant trucks and SUVs don’t get that terrible of mileage anymore.

What does the amount of updates have to do with it being a pig? Those are mostly small bug fixes and security updates — something the #1 browser should definitely be doing, since they will be under the most attack.