Did the price change (or was it a typo) on the Samsung Gear S3 Frontier?
Did the price change (or was it a typo) on the Samsung Gear S3 Frontier?
Did the price change (or was it a typo) on the Samsung Gear S3 Frontier?
Did the price change (or was it a typo) on the Samsung Gear S3 Frontier?
To me, to two things:
Or a bike... I mean, hell, even a scooter could make that commute a breeze.
This was almost an NP for me, then I remembered how quickly that gen of EVs depreciated. There’s a fair number of Nissan Leafs of similar vintage for around the same price, and even the early Leafs (urgh) were a more practical car than the Think; plus, the fact that they sold more and Nissan is still around will make…
The 2080 at $800 is just not a good value for what you get over the 2070. Given the significant performance impact that I think Nvidia can get with their next gen, when they move to 7nm, I’d almost argue that if you’ve got $800 to spend on graphics cards in the next 5 years, it makes sense to get the 2060 now, and…
The 2080 at $800 is just not a good value for what you get over the 2070. Given the significant performance impact…
Most games that support ray tracing right now do so the way that some movies were “re-mastered” to be 3D years ago: It’s in a few specific places, and mostly as a gimmick.
Most games that support ray tracing right now do so the way that some movies were “re-mastered” to be 3D years ago:…
“This latest-generation unit offers a ton for not very much money.”
“This latest-generation unit offers a ton for not very much money.”
“The finance guy” at a car dealership is so close to a cartoon villain that you really can’t parody them. It’s the biggest problem with the dealership model - and it’s ironic, because the dealership model was supposed to “protect” consumers.
I often compare buying a car to buying a house, since those are the 2 largest purchases most people make. It’s nuts that buying a car means more time sitting at the dealership, even after you’ve agreed on a price.
Isn’t that amazing? That also means they didn’t look when they bought the car - even buying new, I pop the hood on any car I’m considering. I mean, why wouldn’t you, even if you don’t know what you’re looking at? You don’t need to be a “car person” to if something is dirty, cracked, held up with zip ties, etc.
Perspective check: Most buyers are totally fine with this, because they don’t know how to pop the hood in the first place, and when they do, couldn’t tell you the difference between a tank of wiper fluid and the engine anyways.
Exactly. If you can find a surviving Land Rover from the 70s that hasn’t succumbed to the sheer force of rust from being in and out of hellish locations, there’s a decent chance that it’ll outlast a Range Rover from the aughts.
Around me, I see a lot of people in very beat up, ~10-15 year old Range Rovers that were…
Yeah, I don’t think it’s true of modern Rovers. Having said that, from what I remember, a lot of even the earlier Rovers had dodgy electrical systems - fairly easy-ish to fix, given that there wasn’t a ton of wiring, but the problem is that today, obviously, the systems are a lot more complicated and wires go a lot…
I mean, that’s also true in cities.... Someone on my blog has an old Mercedes from the era when those giant rubber bumpers were mandatory, and I often look at that car in envy, and I don’t even park on the street!
I’ve heard that that’s not really true of modern Land/Range Rovers as they’ve adopted pretty much all the modern tech that you’d expect would be hard for someone with a small toolbox in the jungle to be able to fix.
Reverse: From the History.com link:
I don’t think there’s much additional data that’ll be collected, given that most users have Google Maps installed, turn on location services, and many use Maps for navigation.
Urban delivery trucks are perfect for plug-in hybrid or full-electric vehicles. I’d be very surprised if most of them did 150 miles a day, and I wouldn’t be surprised if many of them never hit 30 mph.
You don’t need Google for that: GM’s new infotainment system will let you order food. I don’t think that there’s that much additional privacy loss, since most people turn on location services on their phones and keep them in the car.
I’ve said this a couple of times in other comments, but I think it was a budgetary concern that necessitated that the episode be so dark: It meant they never had to show the entire CGI army of differently sized/shaped skeletons, and it meant that most of the time, when we saw a bunch of “wights,” they were actually…