Thank the gawds that didn’t make it to market.
Thank the gawds that didn’t make it to market.
Yeah, and what I’ve found most amazing about their recyclability, is that it’s like ~75%. That’s amazing. Compare to say, glass, which you would think would also be high... nope. ~30%’ish. Still. Just think of not only cars, but computers, laptops, phones, watches, ETC. And all the more in the future, there will be…
Fair enough. And I may even agree with some or a lot of that. Cheers!
I, too, have driven a lot of miles on I-95.
I prefer my rubber-based adhesive on the back of a GORILLA!
You seem nicer today; good sleep? :)
That’s actually pretty “easy” in machine learning though. It would not be difficult at all to code up a neural network to handle this, and a LOT of pre-input can be entered before the software ever even hits the streets. This might be one of the easier problems to solve.
Ditto.
To be fair, name one ingredient of a battery this is NOT finite.
I still think it needs to be a combination of things. How short-sighted is it to look to only batteries and nothing else gets a real shot (take a mulligan on the hydrogen debate and throw it out for now)? I mean, in my tiny brain, I keep seeing fossil fuels all over again. Everything is finite, right?
Neither, just a question for clarification. But since you went right to using “troll,” I don’t care anymore. Thanks, though.
What are “loans like this?”
This is pretty ridiculous. It’s not about buyers remaining “helpless” to need Tom’s services; it’s quite possibly the exact opposite. If you went to Tom with this situation, how does it affect him either way? I can almost guarantee you, that he would never tell someone to pull off this shady-ass shit, which…
And I’m trusting the self-proclaimed “ThatGuyWhoBuysUnreliableCrap?”
Pfft. C8's cheaper new. CP.
#takeyourmeds
And BTW, I drive an Xterra, so GO FUCK YOURSELF WITH YOUR FUCKING GAS MILEAGE BASED SELF-WORTH.
When did you switch from Toyota-hating to everyone-hating? Dude, chill.
I think you need to do some re-education on what “all-season” REALLY means. There are about 75,000 articles on this site alone, at last count.