driftingnarwhal
Drifting Narwhal
driftingnarwhal

"Don't be a jerk" is key. During the cranky morning commute I see people quickly close gaps in traffic to prevent merging. Turn signal or no, gotta close that gap! It will save at least ten milliseconds in arriving at work.

Almost every day, I see someone do a crazy driving stunt—crossing over three lanes at once to get to an exit, turning left from the far right lane, or stopping at every intersection even if there's no stop sign there. I chalk it up mostly to people not being prepared or being either overly cautious or overly

"It's a great evolution of the flat design..." Who started this damn flat design trend? Wasn't it Apple, with Jony Ive removing "skeumorphism" from iOS? We've got a disgusting flat Windows 8 look, now it's spreading to Android.

Another Logitech - the M325. Works great for right around $20 from Amazon.

I'm not sure I would classify this as "real" off-roading. More like getting your Rover dirty. That trail would barely carry a rating here in Colorado. Take it out on some rocks and you'll understand why you only see these things in mall parking lots.

Let me guess, the Range Rover then died of dysentery the next day?

Tesla Model S, because you know... batteries

Following on that, he probably doesn't care too much how much he wins races because it's pretty obvious that his job is very commercially focused at this point. Sebastien Loeb can will all day long, but he isn't getting the press, attention, and spotlight that Block is. And he deserves it because he's awesome, no

Seems like the kind of pro athlete that you could legitimately have a beer and chill with.

I dont think Ken Block is the best rally driver out there, but he sure it a nice humble guy that appreciates everything he earned throughout the years. Plus hes got two amazing Huskies

ok so if you pay for just the food then cook at your home. when you go out to eat you're also paying for a chef, line cooks, prep cooks, food runner, server, bartender and also the experience of having someone deal with your cheap complaining and unappreciative ass. and that last bit is what you tip for because thats

My point is that I feel that every person is far far more than the color of their skin or who they like to bang in the bedroom. If you're gay, you're just another person, and showing that is the best way to humanize a group of people.

No, he's right. PDAs gross a lot of people out, gay, straight, whatever. If Sam (or anyone) wants to kiss their partner after a draft, that's fine, but I don't need 5 minutes of making out, cake mashing, and slo-mo instant replay of it. Don't care if it's Sam or if it was McCarron and that ridiculously hot girl he

Q. An old person is crossing the road. Do you:

From the online test I took about a week ago: "If the gates are down, the lights are flashing, and the train is honking, is it safe to try and beat the train?"

I figured that this would be the perspective of the server. I'm done being worried if the server thinks I'm an asshole, though. If I'm treated like I'm an inconvenience, I'm not going to reward the server by giving them money that I had to work to earn, too. I'm literally opening my wallet and giving optional money

I have a question for all these people complaining: exactly how boring are your lives that you're seriously watching the 7th round of the NFL draft?

I'm tired of these tipping articles across the Gawker network! Why not campaign for changing this ridiculous practice? I hate that I waste my time trying to remember who to tip, what to tip, how much to tip, and now cash over credit. And at the end of the day, if I somehow don't do this properly, I look like the scum

Having worked in 3 restaurants, I have never heard of anyone "receiving tips on their next paycheck". That's crazy. You pay out at the end of the night. It doesn't matter whether your diners paid in cash or credit card. Whatever is left over after the meals are paid for, you walk away with in cash. This could mean you

Is this really that big of a deal? While I carry cash, that's more of an "emergency fund" for times when I can't use my card. If I'm tipping 20% on a $30 tab, we're looking at an 18 cent difference on a $6 tip between cash and card even at your (higher than average) processing fee of 3%.