Archive for the ‘By design’ Category

Montreal Auto Show: Like

- January 16th, 2012

A new perspective

This past Sunday my friend and I decided to attend the Montreal International Auto Show at the Palais des Congrès in Old Montreal. Read more…

Eye of the beholder

- January 13th, 2012

There was a time, not long ago, when General Motors and Ford were accused of having cars that didn’t inspire drivers. Read more…

The art of car commercials

- August 1st, 2011

The trick to a great car commercial is time and money.Time (the ever so varying variable) will give you a list of creative artists of which to hire and work with. Money will buy you their time, knowledge and artistic brain to develop something incredible.

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Making a unique ride

- May 13th, 2011

Remember Grandpa’s old station wagon?

It climbed Mt. Washington, stopped for yard sales, honked for the hell of it and even warned you to back off if you could read the bumper stickers. It was one of kind. Read more…

If looks could sell

- April 5th, 2011

As an automotive journalist who drives a ton of vehicles I’d otherwise never, ever have a chance to, it’s always interesting watching people watch the vehicles I test.

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Are you nutz?

- July 29th, 2010

Every time I open up my Hotmail these days, I see the ad telling me to update my Hotmail web address. You know the one with the photo of the Goth chick or the tattooed dude, saying that your old address says a lot about who you were but not so much about who you are. Read more…

Less is sometimes better

- June 24th, 2010

Driving a different new car every week gives me the unenviable ability to test out the latest and greatest technological advancements in the industry. Read more…

Soccer mom anthem

- May 7th, 2010

Who says minivans aren’t in tune with the times? Read more…

Rules of attraction

- April 15th, 2010

When I got back to the office from the New York auto show, there was a voice message waiting for me from one of my loyal readers (I know, I kinda “pfffft”, too …).

This person told me how I wasted my time reviewing the Toyota Yaris since it wasn’t worth the paper on which it was written (I take it he meant the story though it sounded as if he meant the car …), and that he took great delight in seeing Toyota taking a hit because all the company’s cars are cheap and ugly. Read more…

A place for all your stuff

- August 13th, 2009

Outside of roadsters, today’s vehicles feature plenty of places in which to stow stuff, with the number of storage bins usually multiplying exponentially with vehicle size.

But that begs the question: how much stuff do you really need to bring along?

I think I carry a lot on a daily basis (though some might disagree) – a mobile phone, bottle of water, computer bag and a camera bag. I need a place to stow a notebook, a first aid kit, my sunglasses, and a parking access card and display permit so I’m not forever forgetting them at home; that’s about it.

On the odd occasion, I’ll stop for a tea, so I need another cupholder and maybe a place to put some napkins. If I have passengers, some place for them to put their drinks is pretty much all that’s needed regularly. Do they need access to four cupholders each or a dozen cubbies? Considering how much time they spend in the car, probably not.

Recently, I was testing an SUV that had no fewer than 25 storage cubicles (covered and uncovered of various sizes) and 12 cupholders strewn about the cabin with about half the cubbies, but only two cupholders, within reach of the driver. I’m not suggesting that may be overkill, but I had Toronto residents asking me if they could store their uncollected recyclables in my vehicle until the strike was over.

Granted today’s Owner’s Manuals take up the entire glove box and usually a door pocket, but once I put my sunglasses in the holder, my notebook in the door pocket, my BlackBerry in a console bin and find a cubby to hold my parking materials, what else do I put in the remaining half dozen small bins? That’s right – junk.

Some of them collected change that I would have otherwise put in my pocket to be removed every night; parking receipts ended up taking up another spot, even CDs ended up with resident status in the SUV (usually after a sole playthrough).

Not only is all that unnecessary, it ends up being a beacon to undesirables in search of an easy victim for some quick loot. Today’s smash-and-grabs are not looking to remove your vehicle’s radio – they’re looking for quick, untraceable payback for their efforts.