redroab2
redroab2
redroab2

The attempt at shooting into your team's basket is amazing. Both teams should have played the game as usual, but trying to score in their own basket and the other team trying to stop them. The "winner" has the easier first round in the tournament! Kinda like that riddle with the two brothers racing across the desert.

I don't do #7... purely because I think it looks stupid.

#6, yes! red indicators can be hard to see, even for the conscientious driver.

I'm not too worried about charge time. As range becomes greater, it will matter less. As Musk says, (this is with a bit of spin, he's exaggerating a bit) the amount of time a supercharge takes and the range you get correspond to how long of a break you should be taking during a roadtrip anyways. And that's with

Hmm, that's a good point. I wonder if we can borrow a few for the next month!

I'm from this town. My sister's 3 mile commute took 55 minutes yesterday. (My 13 mile one to the same destination somehow took only 40 minutes.)

It's all about how the residual (which is agreed to when the lease is signed) compares to the actual value of the car. You could actually come out "ahead" as opposed to if you had just borrowed, but most likely you'll be worse off as the dealer will often over-state residuals.

It's your money... but that strikes me as foolish! I default to 20%, and even if the server is just okay, I'll tip that, but when someone is genuinely bad you betcha I'm not tipping a full 20%.

You could recreate feel by using a feedback motor in the steering wheel. Then you could variably eliminate, or even amplify feel. Also, you could change the steering ratio, for example under 5 mph you could jack it up to make parking "easier."

well, indeed they are, but you could say that about any two economic groups. That is, maybe the middle class is "too rich," presumably if we redistributed more of their wealth we could elevate the lowest class. Of course, I don't actually think that poverty in the US is a money problem. Or, it can't be simply fixed

It's not about what you need or deserve, it's about what you earn. And I don't mean what you "work for" or "sweat for" or whatever, just literally what you can manage to accumulate.