amiright
amiright
amiright

I was under the impression that the Good Sam law protects civilians from being forced to endanger themselves in situations like these. Also, I think it protects them from civil suits brought by the victim(s) and their families.

...Isn't this exactly what the article is explaining? At a "normal" viewing distance, individual pixels can't be seen. No display in the world is meant for you to mash your face into it on a regular basis.

Crazy man. Losing one eye to the camera had to screw with his depth perception...this is probably the one situation that I would want all of my ability to concentrate.

Most diesel prices I see in my area (Long Island, NY) are comparable to 93 octane...roughly 20-30 cents more than 87. Lately though it's been priced that same as 89. Considering the mpg advantage diesel vehicles get, it's definitely a win.

I can't believe how many idiotic things I've seen in this video...and I've only watched the first 11 minutes.

The camera is not going to change the fact that this guy was not paying any attention to the light. He missed it so bad that the F150 going on the cross street made it through by a wide margin before he blew the light.

1. Nissan Juke

White Collar has Ford all throughout it. They've had the characters use Sync to call home and even used the characters from the show in commercials. It throws you for a second since you're not sure if it's a scene from the show or not.

I wouldn't trust Best Buy's display anyway. They've already played shenanigans on their displays before. http://www.thefakegeek.com/2008/11/retail-shenanigans-geek-squads-calibration-service/ and http://www.audioholics.com/news/editorials/best-buy-tricking-customers-hdtv-calibration

Why still? I've maintained that point of view since I first heard of twitter. The only good use I've found for it is tweeting for credits on my Amex.

That's what I thought of immediately. There's an active Maxima/Infiniti I community on the internet...I would have parted out as much as I could and then hooned it to a fiery death.

the list seems easy enough to fix using ballast...no?

That's an identity thief's wet dream right there. Everything that they could possibly need is all right there on the driver's license.

It just sounds like an awful idea all around. I know identity theft is not a 21st century phenomenon.

I got my driver's license right around the time that the Patriot Act was passed so I never saw this...but social security numbers used to be on driver's licenses? Really?!

Sorry, but the title to this article could have just been "How I used LinkedIn and some imagination to score an interview". The title here leads one to believe that you can hack the computerized applicant screen.

A pet peeve of mine is the slow people who don't understand that they should GET OUT of the right lane when people are trying to merge on the highway. It's a small thing, but I've almost been in many an accident because the guy already on the highway can't figure out if he should slow down or speed up for you to

Also - the rear bumper does not stick out much from underneath the taillight.

My first thought...White Lincoln MKZ. Wrap around headlights and taillight shape is correct. Also the C pillar is wider at the bottom than at the top.

Probably - the idea was to try and find a good quality vodka (read = few impurities) so that the taste testing wouldn't be affected.