stalephish
StalePhish
stalephish

Alternatively, if you’re OK with “only” having 496 hp, the Charger Daytona R/T offers 317 miles of range.

But do you daily drive the Porsche sportscar? winter, road trips, etc? And still expect it to hold its value well? Quick search on Auto Tempest, there are 5 year old Porsches with daily driven mileage with around 50% depreciation.

US market share of luxury EVs is apparently 42.4% in 2023, up from 15% in 2019. And 61% in Asia-Pacific.

I’ve had auto HVAC in my 2009, my 2018, and my 2023, but not my 2015, and it’s distracting to have to fiddle with it in the 2015. Really the only thing I do is turn it full off if I’m going to put the windows on or something.

Sounds more like a software car in whatever vehicle you’ve driven and not that the concept itself is bad. I mean, how often do you adjust your thermostat at home? I have a Nest at home and I probably haven’t touched the dial in 4 months

I don’t buy cars thinking they’re going to be stable or appreciating assets, I buy cars to drive them. People said EVs were too expensive, now EVs are less expensive, and people now complain that they’re too cheap? As the owner of a 5+ year old EV that has certainly depreciated on paper, it doesn’t really matter

“today’s EV market crash”

Even when they are controlled automatically with a thermostat? In my car, for example, you set the thermostat, i.e. “68", and then it uses a combination of blowing warm or cool air, heated seats, or heated steering wheel to accomplish it. Unless you’re being exceptionally picky, you don’t need to manually go press a

I read it as if he was Ross Geller

Isn’t that the case with any washer though? I have a 2012 Whirlpool, and with no prior experience in large appliances, I replaced the driveshaft on mine last year from a couple YouTube videos and a few weekday evenings of work

‘Born In The Air’ Pilot Helps Deliver Baby During Flight To Thailand

Remember, the Cybertruck Foundation Series costs about $120,000 when new.

She definitely did try re-registering the fingerprints (Pixel 7), but fair enough on the $2 glass. But they’ve always worked for me on my non-fingerprint-screen phones, probably last 2 or 3 phones I’ve used the cheap $2 glass to much success. Have certainly cracked a few but never penetrated through to the screen.

On a serious related note, it would be cool if Kinja:

Perhaps they specifically designed it to be thinner in that area or something. I’ve even seen some that have a hole cut out of the screen protector right on the fingerprint reader spot. But the Amazon special brand screen protector didn’t have anything fancy like that.

Tesla Model 3 (and wife’s Tesla Model Y) — it makes an alert chime if you touch both pedals at once, left foot braking be damned! Basically everything else on the car is configurable, down to if you want the car to automatically scold you from being a left lane hog, but disabling the two pedal chime is not one of the

Neither my wife nor myself had broken any phone screen, until a year or so ago when she dropped her phone face down on a concrete footpath. It was Corning Gorilla Glass 3, but one little pebble pin pricked and shattered the screen. Some glass shards came off from around the edges, but it was still usable for a couple

So if you forget where you parked on Black Friday, and someone else hotwires it and drives it away, it’s fine, because it was a found lost item?

You’re worried about a thief getting fired? I don’t really think the income of the person who had their lost property stolen is really relevant

Right, so basically none of the accused are responsible for the actual problem. The loads of satellites in LEO will knock themselves out, especially the modern ones with active deorbit. Satellites higher up are in much smaller numbers and launched by other parties entirely, many by foreign entities.