HideyoshiJP
HideyoshiJP
HideyoshiJP

Only if it's a boy Ford...

That's fair. Sadly, that's most enterprise software, especially if it targets a specific industry.

I totally get what you mean. Then I play Yakuza, which is may or may not be a documentary and it all clicks in my head.

And, you won't end up in a jail in Japan*!

I'm one of the jerks that keeps people on IE7/IE8/IE9. I'm sorry. :( I blame the fools who bought horrible software without consulting us.

Oh Japan. You so silly with your Blu-lays and such.

The only thing I dislike is the black continuing downward from the grill and the quad exhaust tips on an I4, but that's par for the course these days.

From the thumbnail, I thought you were talking about the night rider guy...

Hey, man. Bubbles be bubbles.

I guess Missouri police don't have any V8 powered Caprice Interceptors in the fleet.

My PC runs most newer games fairly well, but it's an older AMD AM3 CPU and runs PCSX2 like ass. Nothing wrong with wanting to go the genuine route.

I don't know of many wheel/pedal sets at this price point that have had those. Most have just been flappy paddles.

I believe you mean rounded boxes on wheels. They are far superior to the earlier creased boxes on wheels, a la Chrysler New Yorker, Chevrolet Celebrity, et al.

This doesn't look predator-like nearly enough.

I always really liked these wheels. One of the few cars that could pull off the three-spoke look.

Nah, eff that noise. The MX-3 is the one you want. I4 or V6, it doesn't matter. It looks great, is lightweight and fun to drive. The optional V6 is delightfully tiny, and look at those swoopy RX-7 inspired doors. It's a great jellybean.

Besides better smartphone integration like Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, which I'm excited about because they probably beat the hell out of most infotainment systems, I'd like to see automakers do more with HUDs and projection. Wouldn't it be nice if we could swipe through holographic menus like Tony Stark does in

Speeding is bad! Google car or not, don't do it.

Most issues due to hard drive failure are mitigated. Usually data-loss occurs due to massive system failure (storage controller or the server itself) or due to software/human error.