avanthomme
Dayve
avanthomme

On mobile it's just settings>dark mode

There’s a chrome extension called Dark Reader that works fairly well.

I was all ready to say something snarky in the comments until I saw that the dude is a Vietnam vet and the restaurant is his comfort and now I’m like “man, whatever gets you through.”

I read the article expecting to roll my eyes a lot, but it actually...makes sense? Not something I'd want to do, but if it works for them, that's great. 

I’m ok with manufactures getting dinged on functional reliability for Hvac in the infotainment. In my option it should always be separate, and barring that, default to a Auto 72F mode if the infotainment computer is not functioning.

They seem to all be related to the extra crap put in a car for convenience.

I have a Ram Rebel with the air suspension. No joke it completely failed before 8,000 miles and took 2-3 weeks to get fixed.

(I also don’t see Jeep on the least reliable list. Definitely fake news.)

It’s a sign of overall quality though.  To me “stranded” is a low bar.  My M3 never left me stranded but the transmission had to be removed to be repaired and the body sheet metal tore and needed repair, the vanos and PS leaked all the time.  The door panels fell apart and had to be re-glued back together.  It was a

Alfa is still hanging out on the list

Is your dad interested in adopting another son? 

When my dad drops off his S8, he gets either a Q5 or A6.  

Well if only 12 people bought Continental’s, and no one sent in issues, obviously it’s right up there as the most reliable. Sense. It makes all of it.

I don’t see Chevy on the most reliable list. Fake news.

Even if leased, no one wants to be tied up at a dealership wasting time with appointments and loaners. Half the time, the loaners aren’t anywhere near as good as your own model.

Not even remotely how that works. Capital gains kicks in when you sell an asset, not when you buy or receive it. And Canada has an exemption on cap gains for your primary residence anyways. So as long as whoever wins it decides to actually live there most of the year, they’re in the clear.

In theory, you have instant tabulation and elimination of issues like hanging chads, crossed out entires and half-filled circles.

Valid, but you have to admit the bullshit at work here, yes?

It can be difficult to get useful information from a review that is written by someone pre-disposed to like the thing being reviewed. Thus, reducing the value of the review - a document in which considered criticism should render an opinion of value.

Dear Gizmodo staff: