That's why they'll probably charge $30 for it - to keep the Netflix crowd off and the business crowd (not data-intensive) crowd on.
That's why they'll probably charge $30 for it - to keep the Netflix crowd off and the business crowd (not data-intensive) crowd on.
Hnnnnggghhhhhhhh
In Boulder last fall, I took a picture of a parking lot where 11 of the 16 cars were Subaru wagons. I must have deleted the picture, sadly.
Oh my god this is an awesome picture.
Ten thousand dollars miles!
Oh, good spot. Those stars on the back do look a bit off.
I was factoring in time spent on stupid corporate approval meetings, I guess.
You're just a barrel full of laughs, aren't you? Lighten up.
This kind of corporate tomfoolery is amazing marketing. The whole thing probably cost Nissan less than $20k, and here we are writing about the GTR.
Right - a negligible amount of electricity.
Probably the restaurant or resort, with their incentive being that the chargers' availability might bring in more (high income) shoppers/diners/guests. That's absolutely worth the likely-imperceptibly-small increase in the electric bill of a large commercial property.
Oh, shut up.
I bid $150! That you give me to take it.
Each generation of Caddy two-door barge looks closer to production. I really hope they make the Elmiraj.
That white truck with the black badge looks a million times better than the chrome-grilled trucks, which look like a middle schooler showing off her braces.
Same thing in Colorado. I sat down with the log sheet for the supervised drives, crumpled up the page a little, and filled in the whole sheet with all different color pens. Then I spilled some coffee on it to make it authentic.
Renting a car to learn on, however, would be a good idea for many people.
Maybe. Or maybe they'll just charge so much for it that they can easily cover any repairs.
I normally dislike colored wheels, but these are gorgeous.
Then you'd have a car (with a manual transmission) that a bunch of people like us rented to hoon. Bad idea.