Executive summary: The majority of car enthusiasts care more about engine power than pollution. This especially rings true in America where consumers can easily modify hardware and software of their diesel engines. Ten minutes and a couple hundred dollars makes a significant change. Thus it has become common to find consumers seeking personal power gains … Continue reading Diesel FTW: Throw the Book at Clean Cheaters→
Dan Lyke asked me a good question today, in response to my Jeep of Death blog post and tweets about patching: So yay for sharing, but we shouldn’t normalize getting your car patches from random Internet users. On the one hand it would be easy to agree with Dan’s point. Randomness sounds scary and untrustworthy. … Continue reading We Need a Digital Right to Repair→
This is something of a buyer beware post. Skip below to the next section if you just want to read the Privacy Policy edits. To be clear I am a huge fan of refactoring and breaking down systems. I obviously a proponent because it is what I do for a living. Dismantling systems of bias … Continue reading Airbnb Privacy Policy Changes→
Part three in a three part series about the history of the Jerry can; this page is a reprint of “The Little Can That Could” a first-person account to support parts one and two. Written by Richard M. Daniel, retired commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve and a chemical engineer, and published in Fall 1987 … Continue reading The Little Can That Could: History of the Yellow Jerrycan→