TurboFool
TurboFool
TurboFool

Around 20+ years ago, when I was in my VERY early 20s, I was hired initially as a QC engineer and then promoted to producer at a shovelware video game publisher. We made mostly GBA games, but there were a few things we’d branch out past on.

No evidence they were Republicans. Various components, including other reports that they weren’t even told who they were campaigning for until they took the job, suggests they were hired not for being Trump supporters, but for being people who were desperate enough to work for the low wages.

Precisely my question. Sure sounds like something is making people sick or “sick” at a higher rate at Tesla.

Hence putting it in your CAR, which has NOT lost power.

The worst part is I had to stop and figure out whether you were joking or whether he actually did that. I have frankly even money on either possibility.

Frankly, anything that thinks it knows what I wanted to do better than I did OR doesn’t consistently work the exact same way every time is a problem. It’s he biggest problem in all of tech, but even more so when driving a heavy weapon.

Which is why, as the article admits, you DON’T hand them your unlocked phone. The apps support transmitting your ID information digitally without unlocking it.

A photograph of your ID isn’t good enough. The entire process includes digital verification of it. They will absolutely not accept a photo.

It’s horrible, but in a good way.

I’m endlessly angry at other drivers for stopping behind the sensor loop. It happens all the time. I have no idea what they think they’re accomplishing by stopping an entire car length back from the line.

Again, “find a different apartment” is not so simple. Also, since he was already moved in, he’s in an active lease.

This is precisely my thinking. A lot of these Cybertruck buyers are clearly first-time truck owners, especially given all their videos of the amazing things they can fit in the bed, which are clearly all things any truck could fit in the bed, usually with much greater ease.

This is more or less where I stand. Elon’s awful, the Cybertruck is ridiculous, these policies of banning you from selling your own vehicle are insane, AND this guy didn’t care about any of that and bought the truck anyway without confirming he could fit it anywhere. It’s hard to feel a ton of sympathy.

Every apartment complex I’ve ever lived at has had at least one person with an oversized pickup parked “in” a standard space that absolutely does NOT accommodate it and makes it difficult for the rest of us to navigate the lot. Not everyone has the flexibility to choose their apartment based solely on finding the

Another story I read about this last week included his complaint that they don’t allow you to test drive the vehicle in any way, so he couldn’t have foreseen the issue. Frankly though, I can’t think of any scenarios where people test drive to their own home to see if it fits in parking. Sounds more to me like a

Most of these people absolutely leave this stuff open to duets and collabs. It drives traffic back to them.

Then he can do a reaction/duet with theirs and still profit.

When I was a kid, my mother had a mid-life crisis moment and bought something we really couldn’t afford: a 1991 Special Edition British Racing Green Mazda Miata. Beautiful paint job, tan leather interior complete with speakers in the head rests, re-tuned engine to better emulate the sounds of the old MGs that inspired

This was my instinct as well. Rigid software flow leaves the reps being communicated with, most of whom are at too low a level to be able to even do much more than look at and click boxes, unable to do anything, and there being no proper escalation path out of it. The employees being dealt with are barely above AI

Absolutely this for me. For years I assumed a Tesla was an inevitable purchase for me just because of the Superchargers. Even as quality began to dip, and Elon slowly got worse, I figured I could hold my nose through that to get the only vehicle that had a good charging experience. While I *did* break past that before