Now THIS is the kind of Mercedes I'd drive to the welfare office to pick up food stamps.
Now THIS is the kind of Mercedes I'd drive to the welfare office to pick up food stamps.
Gawker can suck Detroit's dick.
my 91 County SE. Just clocked 100K. Minimal issues and normal maintenance. Loving it!
You're awful garbage if you think money is better spent on giant floating targets than actually feeding human beings
Dude needs some GoPro equipped quadcopters to shoot at.
I have one of the 400 Great Divide Editions that were sold in '91. Mine is badged #101. I've taken this truck everywhere and the only mods are a couple inch lift and slightly larger tires. I've got a roof top tent and all the goodies to go with it. Occasionally I toy with the idea of painting it up like the original…
I can also predict, accurately, that the person that invents a perfect cure for baldness will be many times a billionaire.
Hm. 95% of that video is not at all about the headline. Wish I'd had a disclaimer before I sat through so much self-congradulatory jubilation. He's a more fashionable Kurzveil.
I'm sorry, but to me, that doesn't really sound like rain.
I'm sorry sir but why didn't you turn sooner?
ALL THE NOPE IN THE WORLD.
If there is 30 min of footage with the hotel in the background, it would not be hard, but it would be costly.
In case anyone is curious, here's Tanner Foust's 332-foot jump referenced above. This was during the 2011 Indy 500 pre-race show.
It's amazing that in a society where 9/10 of people have a camera in their pocket that pictures can still be so moving.
How to enjoy perfectly fresh cake!
It's kind of ridiculous when you think of this in perspective. Humans have been on this planet for roughly 200,000 or more years and have never had access to anything that would allow them to see something like a supernova actually happen. Sure they could look up and see a particularly bright star, but to see a thing…
It's actually very hard to fall asleep on the ISS.
There's something impactful about knowing what I'm looking at is real. Think of the hundreds of thousands (millions?) of manhours that culminated in that. The years of science and engineering progress. Awesome.
More cameras!