nikiaf27
nikiaf27
nikiaf27

It's interesting how similar all the cars they made that year are. It seems the only difference is the badge of the front (obviously that's not the only difference but appearance-wise that's the most distinguishing one).

I love the evil look of the '59 Buick lineup.

Trade school needs to stop being portrayed as "for people who aren't smart enough to go to university". In Canada at least, there is a growing lack of skilled tradespeople to do electrician, plumber, etc. work because everyone is going to university (full disclosure: I'm one semester away from my bachelor's degree).

Forget one of the greats, he was the great.

For all the Canadians on Jalopnik, am I the only one that thinks winter isn't officially here until the Midas "Canadian Police Chase" commercial starts playing again?

My first thought: the Canyonero F-Series (Tahoe F-Series?)

I'm lucky to not receive very many gift cards as presents; so I don't lose much money this way. What I generally do is keep the one or two gift cards I have in my wallet and then whenever I happen to be at that store, I just hand it over and use up the remaining balance and pay the rest off with my own money. This

Watch some locally-produced tv shows. That's a good way to pick up on how people speak, which is something you won't learn from a book.

Why not just host the season finale at a track that isn't terrible? Adelaide anyone?

You make a strong point there, I'll concede that one. You'll have to excuse my ignorance :P

As time passes, I'd like to think this is something that will be easier for people to do. I'm not gay, but I know some people who are and it doesn't affect my perception of them. I definitely view their choice as different from mine but as a millennial (and I'm sure I speak for a lot of them) I don't judge them or

All this does is strengthen the point that video games are being SEVERELY held back by the extremely long life cycles of consoles. The saddest part about all this is that project cars on PC is already ahead of what the "next-gen" consoles are capable of, so already we've fallen behind.

I learned C# this past semester. In business school we're not too concerned about being particularly proficient or advanced coders, so C# was the perfect language to teach us. I had gone in with no prior experience in programming and I have to say, I picked it up very quickly (but I'm a far more knowledgable computer

I was 16 if memory serves, but even now at 21 I rarely shave more than once a week. I don't have a ton of facial hair and it doesn't grow very quickly; so for the most part I don't mind it filling in a bit before shaving it off again.

I think the more appropriate question is, "do you want to look like the suit you're wearing actually fits you?"

I learned what I did about computers first by deleting random files and seeing whether windows would still run (I spent my childhood using a computer with a hard drive too small to hold more than a couple of games at a time, so I did my best to "optimize" free space) and then later on when I stopped sharing a computer

Depending when exactly this thing launches, it may very well be the first car purchase I make.

I have a PS3 already, so I wouldn't be buying a PS4 solely because it plays blu-ray discs. It's nice to have a current-gen gaming console, but the times I use it are few and far between; but I still like having one around.

Couldn't have said it better myself.

I agree with you on this. There's something about this console generation that seems so lacklustre compared to the previous one; and even at $399, I'm more tempted by the PS4 as a blu-ray player that has the potential to play games rather than as a gaming console.