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The 2016 Chevy Equinox

2016 Chevy Equinox LTZ AWD

2.4 L 4-cylinder engine
6-speed automatic transmission
All-wheel Drive (AWD)

182 horsepower
172 lb.-ft. of torque

Starting at $26,795
This one $37,995

You know me – function over fashion, forever – so I like the look of this Equinox.

That’s not to say I think the Equinox is ugly, not at all.  In fact, the model you’re looking at remains mostly unchanged since its debut in 2009. As in – this vehicle will age well.

A fast way to differentiate previous model years from this 2016 is the new grille and headlights.

Available in 3 trims – LS, LT, LTZ – this is the top LTZ.

Remember, this Equinox is a people-mover; it’s not supposed to press you back in your seat, it’s a work horse, and it does that well. Pickup is decent off the launch, and while your foot will be to the floor while merging or passing, it’ll get there. While towing 1,500 pounds too.

Steering and suspension follow suit – tuned for comfort – and during it all the cabin is quite quiet.

AWD is available in each trim, another +$2,200. And it’s possible to opt-up to a 3.6L V6 engine which outputs 301 hp and 272 lb-ft of torque.

Fuel economy is rated at 9.9 L / 100 km (combined,) and I achieved a 9.7 L / 100 km. Not sure I’ve ever typed a that I achieved a lower rating before; I drive like a pig remember.

The centre console controls are easily learned, and there’s so many hard buttons!  YES.

Features include remote start, a backup camera, cruise control, 8-way power front seats that are heated, and the cabin’s climate control is automatic.

A + $2,325 sees the addition of a sunroof, higher quality speakers and a navigation system.

The backseat is roomy, one of the largest in the segement, and ready – the rear seats recline. Nice eh.

This makes the cargo area slightly smaller than some of its competitors, but no matter, fold down the 60/40 seats and it’ll be fine.

Like most GM products, standard on all trims is the ability to connect the car to the internet.

Using OnStar with 4G LTE and a built-in WiFi Hotspot, passengeres can connect via the dashboard. Learn more here.

Chevy is great at storage.

Like the two-tiered centre stack cubbies, and the deep armrest storage compartment that easily holds your Happy Meal Spiderman driving glasses.

A + $1,250 Driver Confidence Package adds the en vogue driving aids – blind spot warning, rear cross-traffic alert, lane departure warning, rear park assist and forward collision alert. That’s a well priced package.

However, see the below photo? That orange bar is the forward collision alert, which I found a bit sensitive.  Why is it lighting up when I’m passing on the highway?

If I owned this SUV, a piece of electrical tape would go overtop.

You’re going to start seeing these Equinoxes everywhere.

Look on your drive home tonight. It’s not that I pointed them out, but because this is Chevy’s 2nd best-selling vehicle (1st is a pickup truck.)

Saved the best fact for last…
the Equinox is built in Canada!

The Oshawa, Ontario Assembly plant produces SUV.

Blog tag = Chevy

 

 

Painting is the Dullest Trade I Learned

KeriBlog_paints

I primed the baseboards and this mirror, and that was all I lasted. Of all the new construction skills I learned this past month, painting is the dullest.

However!

Fresh paint sure adds polish to a room, once the trim was finished my whole house crisped up beautifully.

There’s a life metaphor in here somewhere… the most boring task has the most impact…

Maybe the best #ThisWeeksFlowers yet. Top 3 for sure. They’re from my own garden.

Blog tag = Animated Gifs (45)

 

 

“To Renovate” – Summed Up in 1 Photo

Top – the last remaining baseboard to be installed when we ran out. We needed 6″ more, it’s purchased in 4′ lengths.

Bottom – what I was sent to the hardware store with.

I know understand why renovating takes forEVER. So. Many. Details.

 

 

Celebrating my Column’s 150th Anniversary

Happy Anniversary to my ‘Keri on Driving‘ column!

Big milestone for me… that’s 150 different topics, 45,000 words, and am pleased to report since its debut 2.5 years ago in August 2012, I only took 4 weeks off.

Read it online at Autonet.

Happy 150th anniversary to my column!

We learned there’s no way out of paying the destination charge when buying a car, and the “Solomon Curve” parabola mathematically proves “speed doesn’t kill, slowness does.” We learned that Santa is a trucker, and Ford’s toughest F-150 test involved men hired from Craigslist.

We now know an Enhanced Driver’s Licence can be used to cross the border, and that while dancing in your car, air vents can double as a wind machine. We also found out it’s more difficult to obtain your licence in Germany versus Canada.

To those without a driver’s licence, “why design your life so that you’re always relying on someone else?”

Valets should be tipped twice, and you should clean your dirty car because “you wouldn’t sit in your living room surrounded by fast food bags.”

Best lines I got printed in the paper, just to see if I could: “my rats-nest hairdo” and “50 Shades of EyeRoll.

I rewrote the rulebook on “what to do after an accident,” investigated the mystery behind the checkered flag, and realized that motorsports boils down to concentration, which gave me the idea toput a monk behind the wheel of a race car.”

Safety aids are overrated, because “when was the last time you checked that the sensor was clean of debris?” And I’m still not excited about autonomous cars, and suggested everyone should “go get lost this weekend, while you still can.”

Did you know “there are over 100 computers (ECUs) in a car?” With the introduction of WiFi hotspots “we’ll all stream YouTube nonsense as we motor along.

We peered inside a car’sblack box(EDR), and its OBDII port, now let’s gowardriving.”

From armoured cars to cloaking a car in camouflage, I specialized in auto security. We solved crimes using car clues, warned thatstick family stickers are still a terrible idea, and the main takeaway on car hacking is that if someone who is that specialized is chasing you, you have bigger things to worry about than your car being hacked.

The most commented topic online (at 125 comments) wasFight Speeding Tickets,” but I’m more proud of my least-commented column, because angry hippies hidden behind a keyboard love to comment, andDown with hybridspublished to crickets. Logic!

One third of traffic is caused by people looking to park, and it makes no sense getting worked up about it since “you knew (the traffic) was there, and still pointed your car at it and drove right in.”

Thanks for reading – here’s to 150 more!

Favourite line:

All of it, because the whole thing is composed of all my favourite lines. If you read no other column by me, please make it this one.

***

Back to ‘Keri on Driving’ – Index

 

 

How to Clean up a Compromise

Just lifted my head. It took 3 locations, 50 km and 6 hours of laser-beam focus.

It was bad this time, really bad. Remember this from the other day? That’s me showing you barely the surface.

If you ever have to do this:

Being prepared is the key. Regular backups, and an organized file structure. Then, wipe both your computer and phone simultaneously. Otherwise, one could re-infect the other, making the entire exercise pointless.

The clean-up kicked off here.

I used to use TrueCrypt to encrypt my password manager file, but since the last cleanup a couple months ago, TrueCrypt is no longer, so I had to scramble just to get my manager open, and get at my passwords to change them. It’s always something (and this is why I’ll never endorse a security product).

Then the operation moved to here.

Change my passwords one after another, because once you start, you can’t stop. Bet I didn’t blink for 80 minutes, and I was seeing spots by the end.

80. Minutes.

And I’m very prepared for this, and very fast, seasoned.

Point is: you couldn’t do it this quickly, you couldn’t rebuild in 6 hours.

And that makes me nervous for you when this happens to you. Start to think, and operate, and organize, like you will have to one day. Because any security professional will tell you: it’s not if you get compromised, it’s when. Unlikely it’ll be this extreme and targeted, but one stupid click, on one bad link….

Because remember, cleaning up a compromise happens while under duress… palms sweaty, a scattered mind, gripping fear that my attacker will figure out what I’m doing half-way through, and take control of the accounts I haven’t yet changed. My password manager was altered a few weeks ago, it’s possible. Seems I attract the very best. L33t. I’ve wondered for a while if I’m getting air-gapped.

Scared eyes. Hand over mouth when focused, always.

One of my worst breaches…

March 2013. It was timed to happen while I was on my first international car launch with the newspaper, an already stressful situation. Just as I was about to walk out the door to dinner with the auto manufacturer, both my Twitter and Facebook accounts were compromised, both published updates not from me.

And what could I do?

I figured okay, clearly the attacker has the ability to delete everything I own, but they didn’t, so swallow the fear and go sit calmly at dinner and pretend nothing’s wrong, eat it (and certainly don’t talk about it, because if you want to clear out a room, talk about being stalked online.)

The next morning the attack continued with a phone call, as I was readying to board the plane home, informing me my cel number had been published… to my own blog.

Yup.

Back to today – crucial stuff is now locked down, my email works again.  See, I’d known I’d been compromised for weeks, but having been at this for so many years I tried something new: I gave up. Fine, you’re so curious well come on in, see what I’m up to… I’m pretty boring eh, I work too much and have no friends. But then my boss couldn’t email me anymore, and now it affects the paper and not just me, so wipe and reset.

I lift my head up, breathe, look around the food court, and all these sounds and voices start to filter in that I’ve been completely tuning out. A table of old men are looking at me bug-eyed, give ’em a wink, and drive home.

To rebuild.

Backup, transfer to other computer, download and re-install my programs, rebuild my phone, everything has to be finished tonight. Memorize a couple more 30-character long passwords. It’s a bit all-for-not though, really, because one ‘ole SQL injection into my search bar…

Because I have deadlines tomorrow for the newspaper, and what do you say, “sorry! Someone’s inside my computer guys, so there’s going to be a few holes in the auto section next week.”

I’ve done this so many times I’ve lost count, 20 anyway. It’s sad I’m this good at it, really.

Of course I have a few suspicions where this started

… obviously ex-boys, and a couple other theories, which in trying to escape from, would make me appear like an anomaly to the watchers, who clearly can’t identify a false positive… ‘independent loner who, when they speak, people listen’ is enough to get your name added to a list…

If I was at all shady, or screwing around hacking people, I wouldn’t breathe a word of this, because I’d have earned this. But I never, ever have. You think I want that karma?

Targeting me is like picking on the kid at recess who’s wearing a helmet. I’ve said the same thing since the beginning – am I better at security than the average person on the street? Yes. Compared to anyone in the industry? Nope, I’m a baby, barely a script kiddie. I blog security stuff for the housewives and average user, opposite of bleeding edge. So like, really?

Imagine living like this everyday, everything you’ve built, your life, under constant attack.

Is this really an email from a reader of my column, or a trick? Why does this Twitter account look created just to speak to me? As if that 1-follower Instagram account just liked a photo from 18 months ago. Oh, my physical address has been changed on all my domains. Can’t get into my cel account online, again. In 2010, 5 months of my calendar were deleted. Notice I stopped using Bluetooth headsets? What is it about Bluetooth? That the range is 30 feet… The military should be studying me, to see how I’m able to eat this much PTSD and still function normally. If I told you how often this bleeds into real life, you’d have nightmares too.

It’s completely out-of-hand, this obsession with me. Someone wakes up everyday, for years, opens a file with my name on it, and dedicates time and energy to messing with my life, and mind.

This stuff is so draining. So I’m taking Friday off here, talk to you Monday.

Back your stuff up this weekend, get a password manager, and change your passwords.

Here’s what mine look like:   H}aU]’&cM$B=>Q(lI!3[d?2Ri