TurboFool
TurboFool
TurboFool

Except this wasn’t a self-driving car. This was demonstrating one of two things, based on whether you go by the title or by Volvo’s impressions:

I haven’t upgraded yet. Probably will soon. My old 3DS XL already uses a 32GB microSD card (in an adapter). So could I just skip steps 13 and 14 and move the card directly from the old 3DS to the new one?

As long as they didn’t screw with how inexplicably fun this car was. Every time I have to rent something I aim for one of these. And then I smile the whole time I’m driving it. That’s really weird for a tiny, cheap, underpowered piece of junk.

Cold cuts are not a suitable meal for the hotheaded, excessively popular host of your TV show after what I'm guessing was at LEAST a 12-hour workday, and probably more like 16 hours.

Yeah, their code names have been ALL OVER the place in the past. Project Reality, Dolphin, Nitro, the SP's codename actually was SP (they claimed for "Special Project," but others have claimed it was a jab at the in-development "Sony Portable"), Revolution, etc. It's part of why I don't think it has that much meaning.

They didn't use emulation because they were literally the same hardware as the generation they belonged to, which is why I don't believe they're in any way separate from it. They're merely a different form factor for the same system.

I didn't see that in the thread I replied to.

Show your math, please. The Game Boy did not have 9 versions. If we count ACTUAL, substantive generations, we're dealing with 3 Game Boys in total. If you're counting the DS as a Game Boy, which it's not, then it goes up to 7 in total.

The New 3DS was just released. Announcing its replacement next year is a LITTLE close, even for Nintendo. Also, considering this push into mobile, the most likely thing to complement that isn't more mobile. IMO, it's more likely to be something either home, or something new like a tablet form factor, or something

The Micro and the DSi don't belong in the same sentence. The Micro was just a different form factor of the same system. It also was a limited run. It was meant as a cute alternative, NOT a replacement.

Seriously? I own a CR-V. I know what side of my car my tank is on, and I also know it stays on that side of my car no matter how many times I drive around.

Reminds me of 1 vs. 100, but for action gamers. And that was an AMAZING experience.

Yeah, I was also thinking about the time this guy spent on this thing. That wasn't trivial. Sounds like many hours of work, especially with all the retesting. Granted, some of that was because he didn't know what he was doing, but I'd bet the dealership service department isn't experienced or equipped to do this

Then how on earth do I, and I thought most people, manage to charge my phone in my car every single time I get in it without having this problem?

So your original statement, despite being fully aware that CarPlay requires bandwidth that Bluetooth just can't handle, stands anyway? So... were they supposed to use magic to make Bluetooth capable of something it's not?

Wait... what? I don't... do you even know what CarPlay is? I get the feeling you don't, as that comment makes no sense.

Okay, so I really don't know anything about Evangelion. I've heard of it many times, in many forms, throughout my life, and seen a few cool things like this, but that's it. Can anyone recommend where I should start if I want to partake?

Yep, that was the plan for quite some time. They eventually switched, with Nintendo stating they wanted one name for all countries. I've since seen claims that it was actually a trademark dispute with, I think, Konami (someone please correct me), because of their heavy use of the word Ultra in some of their games.

I loved the controller. No complaints about it at the time.

That gives me an idea for a horror novel about a sentient psychic microwave oven with syringes full of deadly life-saving vaccines for fingers.