Fell asleep while wife was driving home last night, she went above and beyond by remembering how important this was to me...
Fell asleep while wife was driving home last night, she went above and beyond by remembering how important this was to me...
Mine got angry at me for taking my picture, but she was talking about her dead dad at the time. (I didn’t say a word, just pulled out my camera and snapped the picture).
For context, they were astranged and she was relieved he died.
What are you smoking? Dude’s wife was driving at 70 mph and capturing this “milestone” …
Reckless af. Very easily could have lost control or read ended a family just traveling to their destination
I would argue it is harder and more dangerous. With the phone you need to unlock it, select camera app, then make sure it focuses (which doesn’t work that great at night, you have to look at the screen, tap on the area you want to focus), second thing is that due to low light conditions to avoid blurring you need to be perfectly still (which is hard to do in a moving car, especially if you are driving), this makes you check the picture then retry, then check again etc.
You likely could spend even a minute looking at the screen to make sure you got a good picture. Each time you switch your eyes need to adjust their focus which also takes a second, but that it is insignificant to the rest.
BTW: even changing the radio station takes enough attention to cause accidents (that’s why they started adding controls on the wheel), but taking a picture (especially at night) is way more dangerous.
I have Sony Xperia phone which has a physical dedicated camera button, that doubles as a shutter button once camera is activated. Despite of that, no matter how much I tried I failed to take a legible picture of back of my neck (I needed it to be sharp so I could send it to my doctor) and after many tries (even with using a mirror) I gave up and had someone to do it for me.
It is really hard to take a sharp picture of something close without looking, especially with low light conditions.
My 2011 Nissan Sentra had this exact dashboard.
Despite the awful CVT I still love that car
Ah yes, dangerous driving by idiots who don’t care if they kill people.
Classic.
Maybe in the 1970s. Any modern car worth owning will be way more reliable than that if you change your oil regularly.
We have a 2004 F-150 with 565,000 miles on the original engine and it’s still running great. We had to get a new transmission at 240k, and I think that’s the only repair it’s needed over about $200.00