Maxzillian
Maxzillian
Maxzillian

I will admit, this made me laugh.

This is such a bad analogy. If I use energy to charge my vehicle, then only one vehicle benefits, but Google AI can tell millions, maybe billions of people how much glue to put on their pizzas. It’s a matter of scale. And glue.

It says suspected drunk driver. If they were just wasted, that doesn’t equate to attempted murder. Murder requires intent to kill 

Nah, FSD recognize FSD. They don’t mess with another Tesla.

Fourth Gear: Faking test data on materials is a major problem and it’s hit about every industry. What ends up happening in many cases is that the buyers are putting their own auditors in house at suppliers, which slows things down and adds cost. However, the idea of trusting a supplier to give you what you asked for

hard to breath with a vehicle on you...

The gold looks better than the default silver tbh

You’re never going to believe this...

I didn’t think of it being a failover method.  That would make sense.  For some reason I thought it had to be continually linked under US law (which would essentially make SbW pointless, but our laws are often like that).

A lack of synchronization between input and output is a much better way to describe this than "lag". They probably didn't bother to tune the force feedback to match the limitations in steering speed when the tires are stationary, and for once I agree with them. As long as it keeps things in sync when the tires are

With the apparent reduction in actual movement compared to steering wheel movement I would be far more interested in whether the wheels kept moving after you stopped moving the steering wheel.  That I could see causing a potential issue when driving.

6.0L guys want to have a word.....

Almost everyone would disagree with you about the Ridgeline. It’s the truck that most people who think they need a truck, actually need. It’s got 5000lbs towing; the cabin of a Honda Accord; a decent bed with locking, waterproof underbed storage. With the gate down and some straps you can haul plywood, bikes, etc...

Subaru Baja. No payload. No towing capacity. Could not carry 4' wide material (at least the Maverick can above the wheel arches) It was the Baja:

Jeep Gladiator -

I nominate the Subaru Baja because it was hoping to rekindle the Brat magic but showed up to the party already drunk and confused on what it was supposed to be and how it was supposed to be dressed. Everyone just ignored it until it went away on its own.

Alright, look. I’m going to stick up for the Santa Cruz. 98% of the time or more, I don’t need a full-sized bed and the “baby bed” is the right size for chucking some outdoor gear in the back or picking up some bagged mulch from Home Depot. Towing capacity is also perfectly sufficient. If I were in the market, a

The 1964 Lightburn Zeta, with a 324cc 2 stroke motor that produced 16bhp. Featured a fibreglass body, perspex windows, and the smallest cargo space imaginable.

Definitely the 08-10 Superduty 6.4 Powerstroke.

The Chevy SSR: