I was removed in front of group nearly 15 people for throwing away a coffee cup after being told that outside food & beverage was not allowed. Please make it make sense @Topgolf
I asked them to review the security tapes to prove nothing I did in any way was threatening to their employees. The manager refused to do this, which would only be logical if they all knew they were in the wrong.
I was informed by the manager whose name was Adam that this act of complying with their staff was disrespectful, made their staff feel unsafe and that I must leave the premises. I felt as though this whole ordeal was a targeted act of racism.
I took a step towards the end of their desk to toss my coffee in to the small waste bin behind the desk. The coffee subsequently splashed up from the tiny trashcan you’d have under your desk in your home office and left some coffee splashed on the stainless steel wall.
Visited this location on 5-19-2026 for a friends birthday, which we had 2-bays reserved. Upon entering the facility I had a half empty coffee in my hand and was told by one of their front desk members that “outside food & beverage was not allowed”. I laughed, and complied.
Today, CNBC released a new video with Consumer Reports comparing driver-assist systems.
But there's a problem… in the video, they used @Tesla's Autopilot, not Tesla's FSD (Supervised), and compared that to the top offerings in other automakers' cars. CNBC also claimed that Tesla lacked an effective driver monitoring camera, but Tesla does have one—so much so that some Tesla owners complain about its sensitivity. Camera based driver attention monitoring is less strict for Autopilot than it is for FSD (Supervised). Not once in the video did they test the latest version of Tesla's FSD.
@ConsumerReports says Ford and GM have the best driver assist systems. The Mercedes system they praise in the video is extremely limited and can only work on highways. Tesla's FSD (Supervised) will work on virtually any road in the US/Canada.
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