I quit reddit, cold turkey, the day they shut off free API access for 3rd parties. Except for a couple of fairly niche subs I haven't missed it at all.
In the future I'd be cautious photographing this particular individual. One can tell by its' stance that it's scheming and I fear it's about to snap into a violent rage.
Except they're not, historically, very desirable cars over here, due to a combination of size, fuel consumption and quality concerns. At least that's the case where I live.
Excluding Teslas I think I'd be lucky to spot more than a handful of US cars/brands a week.
As someone not used to it, I find it very annoying. Where I live the final sale price/cost to consumers is what must be advertised, by law. I remember car dealers attempted to omit delivery cost, a good while back, but that shit was shut down quick.
I'd been texting for a couple of years when this came out, and had just logged my first full year working as a web developer. The next 5 years or so felt amazing, hardware and software was improving so quickly on all fronts.
With the initial report in hand I suppose the lawsuit will have to claim that shutting off the fuel supply was done intentionally, and thus was not a crew error.
They meant to crash the plane, how dare you suggest otherwise!?
I quit reddit, cold turkey, the day they shut off free API access for 3rd parties. Except for a couple of fairly niche subs I haven't missed it at all.