buddylee34
BuddyLee34
buddylee34

Clearly fanboy glasses are being worn by someone. The article states "It was a bit of a surprise to not see more of a bump in performance in the iPhone 6 over the 5s;" which echoes the sentiment in the meat of the article stating that the iphone 6 camera doesn't appear to be much better than the iphone 5s camera,

I believe the rule that makes Manziel's play illegal is called "hiding out". I just saw it yesterday when I was reading Rule 12 section 2 after the hit on Foles. Hiding out is found in Rule 12 section 3.

It does detract slightly from the badass-edness of the photo doesn't it? He could have been anywhere else in the photo and it probably would have went unnoticed...

Maybe Mercedes' next big reveal should be on Feb. 1, maybe 9pm EST. Surely their target audience would much rather watch the reveal than whatever else could possibly be on at that time... I mean, people with that sort of disposable income don't watch TV right?

It's like that old Ewok movie where the little girl where's a bracelet that tells her about her family's heartbeat... and they eventually all stop so she knows they're dead. How sweet?

When BMW hosted the BMW Championship at Crooked Stick in Indianapolis in 2012, I got 2 free tickets (for Thursday) in the mail, because I bought a BMW in 2008! They even had a concierge tent where you could just walk in when you get there and skip the very long line for everyone else, whether they had bought advance

Imagine that, a Tesla in a crash at normal speeds doesn't explode into a fiery death trap. But heaven forbid they catch on fire pushing 100mph and being ripped in two.

Funny picture, yes, but to echo everyone else, this is not a selfie. A selfie is when you take a picture, of yourself. "Am I the only one that gives a shit about the rules!?!?"

An example of doing something 'right', instead of settling for 'good enough'

I don't think anything really came of it. teslamotorsclub dot com had more information on it, and even had a thread discussing a countersuit, but that obviously went know where. There was mention of an actual plaintiff too (not sure if represented by Pomerantz), but the link for that was dead. Regardless, there

So yes, Pomerantz Law Firm, out of Northern California. It looks like they were trying to organize a class action lawsuit (that I'm guessing never actually materialized) alleging that Tesla made false claims that led to the stock price falling a considerable amount. The firm tried to get anyone that had bought TSLA

That actually kind of happened to Tesla just last year when the 3 fires happened. I forget the exact details, but I'm pretty sure they were sued for "lost stock value", and I want to say it came from California too. I'll try to look it up and find out more details...

That really was a fantastic video to watch. The sight and sounds of the 'featherlight' cars really makes them seem so much more impressive than the typical supercars, but that's obviously a result of the type of course they were on.

I'll actually agree with that, I had to re-type my response to you one time, and in the first version I believe I referred to it as a proof of concept. I'd argue that a proof of concept is one better than vaporware, but neither are technically deliverables.

You're referring to speed in two different contexts.

Interesting article indeed, but I hardly think this should be construed as a negative, although many people will try to make it another doomsday for Tesla.

cumbust

Yeah I don't doubt the presence of power, but the audio cues certainly don't match the visual cues

Wow, I have never heard something sound so fast, but look so obviously, and agonizingly, slow.