maybe not brutalist/beautiful, but perhaps there’s something profound about a lie that both the person hearing and telling know is a lie, and they both know that the other knows its a lie, which is some how truthful?
maybe not brutalist/beautiful, but perhaps there’s something profound about a lie that both the person hearing and telling know is a lie, and they both know that the other knows its a lie, which is some how truthful?
These things are insane, because you can see the “actual” pipe turning down to that hole through the fake tips. I want to say there was an article on here about this weirdo assembly, and while I can’t remember what the actual explanation for why they existed, but I remember it being really dumb.
I think its less about “boner for real exhaust tips” and more about how this looks crappy when you can just see empty space behind the bumper through it. Worse yet if you see an actual unfinished downturned pipe for a tip.
I mean, this is what every passenger vehicle is heading for at this point.
The thought of that premise being applied to modern Suburban’s and Expedition’s somehow sounds even funnier.
the 1 time a year most of these guys will need to haul something ***that wouldn’t already fit into a 3-row BOF SUV***
Whoops, forgot Rush. Ah well, gets the benefit of the doubt of being from before the time of DTS.
Ahahaha hell yes. As someone who works in construction, I strongly identify this. “Where’s the nearest door on this document? Does it look like it’s 3' wide? Ok, set the scale from there.”
I mean, this lines up with what the rest of the market is doing. The high-end EV as a boutique item has more options out there than interested consumers. Everyone is just clamoring for the affordable options now.
A modern redux of Grand Prix is the sort of retread (pun intended) that’s easy to get behind. Two dramatic F1 movies in nearly a 60 year span is not remotely an over-saturation. If anything, it probably only feels tiresome to people that weren’t interested in the first place.
It’s not uniquely a Volvo problem. Even though ICE’s have been running their throttle and brake-by-wire through the same CANBus that manages infotainment for decades now, EV’s apparently don’t keep the strict driving functions as far removed from everything else, and it makes random bugs more likely to cause serious…
Indeed, and modern systems are pretty much still this rudimentary. The vessel’s GPS location and a compass are still the only inputs, there’s just more software there to handle a literal destination.
“lol, you can see all of that from the photos”
screw it, why don’t we replace people with touch screens?
I wonder how much of this is rooted in AI propaganda making people think a car that actually completely drives itself is coming in like the next 10 years. When it’s not.
Heck, you’ve got a lot of good options new at that price point too.
This is actually what autopilot is in the marine world. It either maintains a constant direction for you, or follows a string of waypoints that you set for it. No throttle control either. Whatever you come across between two points is the person at the helm’s responsibility.
I think Buick would have actually gotten killed recently if it wasn’t for the popularity in China. Something tells me the clout would take a hit if the brand didn’t exist in its original market anymore.
Right? The obvious comment here is that Buick has had a bunch of really cool concepts over the last 10 years, but the lineup still solely consists of generic crossovers.
You could probably make Pontiac work as a cheaper version of the Cadillac sedans, but that would probably come at the expense of some sales of the latter. Which somebody else at GM would not be happy about.