dyerhaus
Chris Dyer
dyerhaus

I hear you. It took me three years to buy my Boxster… and I don't really consider that an unusual car.

No one can write a review like this anymore because no one makes cars like this anymore.

I'd rather keep my Chipotle gift cards.

The problem seems to stem from how Yosemite handles its Wi-Fi connection with AirDrop using a connection called AWDL. So, as you'd guess, the solution is to disable it. You can do so in Yosemite with a Terminal command:

Here's a shot of my first car ever. I tried attaching this to my original post, but for whatever reason, Kinja's awesome website scripting wouldn't upload it.

My first car was a 1977 Datsun 280Z… and it was stolen in Grand Prairie, TX in 1991 and never recovered.

Hyundai is correct. A friend of mine was staying in the same hotel the drivers/crew were at in Tahoe. He has pictures as well.

Apple will sell more iPhones in the first hour of pre-order than Mercedes will sell cars all year long. Yeah, Apple is bigger news.

I spent 4 years in New York City, I much prefer the drivers there! I've been in NorCal for 5 years, the drivers are insufferable.

This is just another example of how artificially low California sets its speed limits. Of course, the people of Northern California generally drive 10 mph below the posted speed limit anyway. It wouldn't surprise me if the speeders are acting on road rage because some a**hole is going 15.

I've done this twice, and I've found many of the experiences you've mentioned in your article to be true… especially the one about people don't like being passed. However, I drove from Dallas to New York City, then four years later, from New York City to San Francisco. I had some pretty scary experiences in the U-Haul

I wouldn't be happy to drive an appliance like the Camry, but it's a car you can be damn sure starts when you turn the key.

Yes, a Camry would "out do" one of these… in fact, any modern car would. Or Mini-van. But all a Camry really says about it's owner is "I've given up on life."

The 308 had a 10-year run, which of course included a starring role on Magnum P.I. For years that was maybe what the car was most famous for, but I think enough time has passed since the show ended that the car can now stand on its own merits.

I think this is one of the greatest cars ever… but I just don't see it being worth that much. Maybe about half that. I still love it though.

"sold here under an American brand" — American, being the active word. I've never heard the DeLorean referred to as an Irish sports car either, so what is it? Bentley? British, but owned by VW. Lamborghini? Italian but owned by VW. Fiat? Italian, but owned by Dodge. By the way, you don't seem to be aware of this, but

So perhaps the writers of Jalopnik need to be more specific since it's readers are a bunch of "know-it-alls." They should have titled this article "The Best Cars that-are-assembled-somehwere-else-regardless-of-marque-then-brought-over To The U.S. That Flopped" Try telling any normal American that Pontiac, Chevy, Ford,

It's a Camry. Everything about it is bad. Why is anyone even wasting time writing about this?

Exactly. Much worse examples of driving happen every single hour here in Silicon Valley, and the cops just watch it, they can't be bothered to actually pull someone over and give them a ticket.

It seems like most of the people here don't understand the point of a Targa. It's the perfect option for someone who enjoys open air motoring but thinks the 911 convertible is ugly (which it is) or maybe feels too "exposed" in a full convertible.