msterbeau
MarcBee
msterbeau

I don’t know film/print photography well enough to say if that might be possible. My instincts say no. Pretty sure you can achieve that in camera though there may have been external strobes involved to helpfreeze” the car.

Yup.  One of the clues that it’s a stationary car. 

Call it artistic blurring.  No one will question it...  

Bow chicka bow wow...

Vinyl roofs are bad enough. Vinyl roofs on modern cars are one of the most horrific aesthetic sins I can think of.  🤮

No. Blurry means long exposure. Or more precisely - Too long an exposure to capture the subject in sharp focus, whether intended or not. Note that there doesn’t appear to be a driver in the car. It’s going nowhere. The implied speed is solely from moving the camera and a long-ish exposure.

I’m done being a party

That’s a very good point, and feels right. Though I can’t imagine the frame moving enough to effect the location of the derailleur and not be visible.

I can’t imagine why anyone would paint an aluminum ladder...

Who wants an Aventador when you can have Forte GT? 

I dunno.  It’s an aluminum frame.  City/hybrid bike.  I don’t beat it up.  The only thing I thought may have contributed was having the frame powder coated a couple years before the cracking.  My reading on the topic seemed to indicate that the temperatures in powder coating aren’t nearly high enough to effect the

See my reply to Burner23956230483205.

Tell me how USB-C is “superior” to Lighting on phones - which is the only significant device that Apple still uses it on? (They use it to charge Magic Pad, wireless keyboards, apple TV remote and the first gen Pencil, but I think that’s it as of the most recent iPad update) The only thing USB- has going for it that’s

There’s no tin foil hat necessary.  Google makes money largely through it’s collection and selling of user data.  What makes you think their agreements with automakers won’t allow this? 

Not in the way nor remotely on the scale that Google, Facebook, etc are.

2011 Giant Roam 2.  I have never seen a bike frame come apart like that. 

Pretty much. I kept a few parts, donated some to a shop that builds bikes for inner city kids and kept the frame as wall art.

Boxy Aardvark/Anteater. 

Google is far worse about killing off technologies and projects than Apple has ever been.  Apple switches interfaces/ports at the leading edge of adaption rather than keeping them forever.  Annoying at times but with useful benefits.

Well said, sir.

I have some thoughts on topics mentioned here.

I hate BB creaking. Though I have only experienced it with aluminum-framed bikes.