pixelpusher220
pixelpusher220
pixelpusher220

“People who do research on cars before they buy them are dumb” is quite the take dude.

Thank you Europe.  At least someone is looking out for even the minimal semblance of sanity.  I read the phrase “touch screen wipers” in some comment, here, good god could there be a worse method?!?

80s/90s Mazda swiveling air vents should have become mainstream. Same with GMs crotch cooler vents. This sweaty guy would welcome and pay for either, or even better, both.

What the hull?

I think its to save the Tesla owner the embarrassment of being seen outside with a Tesla.

My sister-in-law had a minor frontal crash in my 2018 Mazda 6, and it cost the insurance company nearly $10k to repair. New parking sensors, radar, and LED headlight that swivels and self levels. The headlight on its own was over $2000.

I never grow....tired...of these videos.

I AM GROOT!

Would you like to play a game?

Extremely accurate. 

Um, Elon Musk is a brilliant man with lots of well-thought-out, practical ideas. He is ensuring the financial security his companies for years to come. Oh yes, and his personal hygiene is above reproach.

Yes, this is real, but the lights are not a Mercedes innovation per se. SAE came up with the turquoise color, Mercedes is just the first to implement it because they are the first with a Level 3 system (which is an innovation)

Shut up and take my trade-in Honda Odyssey

I can see the ad now.

Good thing you’re prepared for an invasion by the Russians or Hamas. Wolverines!! 🤦‍♂️

I don’t believe AR-15s and other assault rifles are useful for the ordinary citizen, so I think there’s a case for limiting them.

I think it’s more of a problem for big industrial users or denser developments—the latter of which are more climate-friendly, anyway—which need more than their own real estate to supply the requisite electricity. This, by the way, is mirrored in our other infrastructure needs, in reverse. Less-dense land uses need

Apologies if I confused you, Qiviut. But no, that’s not what the study is saying. The average weight loss of the treatment group over the whole 84-week-long study was 25%. But the researchers also looked at the percentage of ppl who achieved certain benchmarks in each group. So about 75% of this group achieved at