Why would you even be looking at getting a truck if you want to delete the pickup bed?
Why would you even be looking at getting a truck if you want to delete the pickup bed?
I’m surprised to hear that for Google, since Google’s other security feature, Google Authenticator, absolutely fails at multiple devices or new devices. When my Pixel broke and I had to get a new one, I had to reset my 2FA at so many sites (which is understandably a challenge for some when you can’t use your existing…
With most of the current implementations being so reliant upon your phone, what happens when your phone is lost or damaged, or you upgrade to a new one without remembering to transfer access over? As far as I can see, you addressed having multiple Apple devices - you could still regain access through your iPad - but…
I’d love to know what this so-called prank actually was. The only thing I’ve seen was one site said he had been right up in the guy’s face with his camera. It seems like they’ve been proud of previous times they’ve annoyed and harassed people enough they get angry, so I’m not completely surprised their “pranks”…
But you don’t need to use a public charger to use an EV in the same way that you need a public gas pump to use a car.
At least this one would actually have people on this no-fly list for a specific reason. The current no-fly list has little to no due process, little to no forms of notification or of recourse when a person is placed on the list, little to no restitution when the person was placed on the list incorrectly, and is an…
I’m not sure you’ve actually watched the body cam footage. It’s actually the driver’s side. This article had it wrong, too, but you can see the gun is next to the floor mat just barely in front of the driver’s seat. It’s at 08:20 in the video on the SLTrib page here:
Why are anti-gun (and anti-truck) people so obsessed with the genitals of the people who own those things?
It may be hard to believe, but squirrels were once actually common pets in the US. President Warren G. Harding even had one in the White House.
Same thing happened to a coworker in her late 30's. She had no idea, started feeling really ill at work, then collapsed.
Correct. Even if he had only been reaching for the seat belt, which isn’t entirely clear, he quickly reached to his right hip where his holster and seat belt were without communicating one bit to the officers about his intentions, without communicating that he had a firearm, and immediately after telling the officers…
In the full video, the one officer pulled the vehicle over. As soon as they get to the vehicle, Mr. Allan responded that he wasn’t going to answer any questions and didn’t need to have a registration or license. At that point, the first officer radioed dispatch and asked for “a couple more” to his location, without…
General instruction in the United States is to roll your window down, then keep your hands on the steering wheel unless instructed otherwise. Not all states require you to notify the officer if you have a firearm, but if you have a firearm near where your wallet or registration are, you should notify the officer prior…
FYI, the firearm was actually on the driver’s side of the vehicle, not the passenger. This article here is incorrect. The videos and the photo of the firearm’s location can be seen here:
FYI, this article above is incorrect about the location of the firearm. It was not on the passenger side, but rather on the floor of the driver’s side of the vehicle.
FYI, this article is incorrect. The firearm was not on the passenger side of the vehicle. Rather, after he was pulled out of the vehicle, the firearm was on the driver’s side floorboard just in front of the seat.
Just one correction since the article is incorrect. The firearm was found on the driver’s side of the vehicle just in front of his seat.
This article is incorrect about at least one thing. The firearm was not on the passenger side of the vehicle. The firearm had been in the holster on his right hip, and after he was pulled from the vehicle, the firearm was found on the right side floor of the driver’s side of the vehicle just in front of the seat.
This article is incorrect in at least one point. The firearm was not on the passenger side, but rather on the driver’s side just in front of his seat on the right side of the floor.
Except that something doesn’t add up. They were temporary in 2013, and officially made “permanent” in 2016. The new “10 year” maintenance contract was signed in 2015 - $2.1 million for 10 years of maintenance. They haven’t even made it to the 10 years they agreed to contractually.