lonestranger
lonestranger
lonestranger

Oh, yeah, I see what you're saying now.

The different eye shapes in the lede pics are what I noticed most. I'd never seen either man before today.

That's hilarious, but your tiny pic sucks.

The two don't look too similar in the lede photos, but give Frein a short haircut and stubble, and compare him to Tully from a different angle. They're still not twins, but I can see some resemblance:

I imagine that I've said this before, but I love the fact that just from reading the headline, I can recognize a Torch article with near-absolute certainty.

They don't do press-release embargoes. When a manufacturer sends info, photos, video and such to the press and asks them to withhold it until a certain date, that's ridiculous in the internet age.

So, here's a question:

All of the pics I've seen thus far are of crew cabs. Is the TRD Pro available in an extended cab?

Licence plate censored (barely) at 0:07. Three seconds later, it's uncensored. Virginia antique vehicle plate 6190F.

At 2:05 in the video above, the annotation says "Improved iron sight and scoping from third person to first-person mode". I can't think of any other specific instances off-hand, but I've read on forums and heard in videos phrases along the lines of "going in to iron sights", referring to aiming-down-sights.

Why, when, and how did "iron sights" become gaming lingo for "aim down sights" (ADS)?

My wife, for starters, thought the PlayStation TV was an actual TV, and expressed surprise when I arrived home from Fedex with a package the size of a small shoebox.

Thanks. Automated washes with attendants are a foreign concept to me. I'm used to one or the other; either fully automated washes where you stay in the vehicle, or washes where attendants wash your car by hand without any automation.

It's since been explained to me by others, but thanks anyway.

Canada. Here, there's three basic types of car wash:

Thanks. Until I read another reply, I didn't realize that an employee had to jump in after it exits the conveyor. Neither Damon nor the news report explained that. Driverless car washes aren't something everyone is familiar with. Sounds like a silly setup to me.

Thanks for the explanation about workers jumping in. Still, even that method sounds odd to me. Any automated car was I've seen or been through, the driver (the car's owner) stays inside the car.

Yeah, that much is obvious, but what do locked doors have to do with anything? How does an unlocked car not "run off the conveyor"?

What if, along with the ///M badge, you also swapped in an M3 engine, M3 transmission, M3 brakes, M3 front suspension, M3 x-brace, M3 wheels, M3 front bumper & side skirts, M3 seats, and M3 steering wheel?