How To Find One Of Japan’s Best Driving Roads Just Two Hours Outside Tokyo

As a city to drive in, Tokyo isn’t the worst, but it is bad. London and L.A. were more chaotic and traffic in Tokyo isn’t nearly as bad as the latter, but it’s still not the ideal place to drive a sports car. So where does one go if one wants some nice roads to drive on? Well there’s one obvious place.

The Hakone Turnpike has been dubbed “Japan’s Nurburgring.” It’s a privately owned toll road but with a twist, or several. For the most part it’s a relatively empty mountain road with stretches of elevated straights and long sweeping curves. As well as being one of many touge roads in Japan, it’s also easily the most famous being the favored road for the local motoring press to test cars on.

That’s what led me there, in a grey Mazda Miata MX-5 RF. It was a grey Sunday morning in Tokyo. I had a convertible, manual sports car waiting outside and I was itching for a drive.

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Getting to the Turnpike from Tokyo is relatively easy. It’s about a two hour drive on the smooth (albeit expensive) motorways. With the thought of getting back on the Turnpike in a manual car, I hopped in the MX-5 RF ready for a day of very legal touge driving.

The starting point was Nihombashi, right in the centre of Tokyo. At 8:30 a.m. on a Sunday it was eerily empty. Getting on the Shutoku Motorway was easy, though it’s an immediate ¥1300 toll fee (almost $12) just to get on. Driving in Japan does get costly very quickly, especially if you use the motorways.

Since I have such great luck, weekend I had the RF to take to the Turnpike there was a typhoon warning. With the folding hardtop well in place I felt more secure in the torrential rain than I would’ve in the soft top.

After an hour-and-a-half of motorway driving it was time to get off at the Odawara exit. It’s hard to miss the Turnpike entrance, it’s got massive green “Mazda Turnpike” signs. The entrance fee is a mere ¥720 ($6.50) and for that you get access to one of the best roads in Japan.

As you drive through the entrance gate and up on the first uphill section of the Turnpike, you’ll immediately notice the quality of the road surface. It’s unbelievably smooth, race circuit smooth in fact. That gives you the confidence to bring any car here—even the hardest and most extreme of cars.

It’s a somewhat challenging road that tests both car and driver, so it’s the ideal place to take a MX-5 and see what that whole jinba iitai thing is all about. As the go-to place for Japan’s local motoring journalists to test new cars on, you would’ve seen countless photos and videos of cars ripping it up the Turnpike.

More hardcore Turnpike fans come here at the break of dawn to avoid any chance of traffic, though even during the middle of the afternoon there’s very little. It’s about a 14 kilometer hill climb from the entrance to the peak where the fantastically named Sky Lounge is located.

Given you don’t exit the Turnpike, you can drive up and down here to your heart’s content. Or until you run out of fuel. There are no petrol stations on the Turnpike itself, so you’ll need to fill up immediately after exiting the motorway.

A road as great as this deserves a great driving car. The MX-5 RF was the perfect companion, despite the weather. The 2.0-liter naturally aspirated engine with 158 horsepower and 148 lb ft of torque was plenty to have fun in. While you won’t be doing crazy speeds (and in all honesty who would in that weather), it was more about enjoying the brilliant steering and perfectly balanced handling through the twists and turns.

While you could take a ridiculously fast car up here and blitz through the course (sorry, I meant road!), and I have done it before in a C63 AMG and M6, I had more fun in the MX-5. Those high power cars were too hectic. Blink and you were already at the summit. The Miata let me take my time and enjoy things.

Whereas in the RF you could take your time hitting the apex, finding the limits of the car, and mastering the joyous slick and short gearbox. While it’s not an official race track and still a road it’s best not think too much about setting record times or hitting max speed but simply enjoying driving.

You won’t be alone on this road too. Some locals do use it as part of their commute so you’ll see random kei-cars and minivans driving up and down the Turnpike. Enthusiastic drivers from neighboring prefectures take their cars here for a casual weekend drive too.

Even with a typhoon warning there were still a few people tackling the Turnpike. From completely stock to heavily tuned, there’s never a dull mix of cars out there. You’ll see most at the top of parked at the Sky Lounge. That’s where people rest for some food or coffee.

The great thing about the other drivers on this road is they’re there for the same exact reason you are. So when a couple of Porsches filled the rearview mirror of the MX-5 it was only polite to engage in a bit of playful cat and mouse. They probably took pity on me and held back as they never tried to overtake me once.

After a couple of hours of driving up and down the Turnpike and with the weather not looking to improve anytime soon, I went off to my final destination that day. Before that I got curious and wanted to explore some of the neighboring touge roads that split off from the Turnpike.

You could literally spend an entire day around this part of Japan and keep finding extraordinary driving roads. I had my final destination of the day set to Fuji Speedway for a pretty special event and the Mazda’s sat nav took me on even more challenging twisty roads.

Going right at the T-junction by the Sky Lounge, we went down towards the Hakone Skyline. Another toll road but a more reasonable ¥360($3.20) fee, it was even more misty and wetter than the Turnpike. It was also a lot more empty but with tight sections and random elevations it was still pretty fun. There was a random shrine by the side of the road I couldn’t resist getting photo op with too. There was also a bit where the road ‘sang’ to you. It was incredible.

Immediately after the Hakone Skyline it joined on to another touge that was so fun and challenging it didn’t even have a name—it simply went by Route 401. Now this was the sort of place where you could hide a body and no one would find it but it looked intriguing from the sat nav map. If the Turnpike was level 1, the mysterious Route 401 was level 5.

A jagged zigzag of a road that went from the clouds in the sky to piercing through forests. For the most part of the drive it was empty. Who’d be out here on a Sunday during a typhoon? Crazy Jalopnik writers in Miatas, that’s who.

By this point I reached the limits of the MX-5’s grip. The back managed to get out ever so slightly but with sheer luck and a testament to the car’s balance, I didn’t end up at the bottom of the touge prematurely.

If you’re visiting Japan and want to get out of the city, visiting the Mazda Turnpike and neighboring roads is a must. While you’re here you might as well check out Fuji Speedway too.

If you feel like your rental car isn’t quite up to par for the road I suggest checking out Fun2Drive. I’ve never used their services myself but might just have to one day.

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Watch Bollinger B1 electric SUV in track testing

Bollinger Motors

revealed the B1 electric sport utility truck this summer, and now is busy preparing to bring it to market. That involves a lot of testing. Yes, it’s an off-roader, but Bollinger needs to test under a variety of conditions, so, as we see in the video above, the company took the B1 to the track.

In the video, we get to hear the whine of the electric motors, which together provides 360 horsepower and 472 pound-feet of torque. Bollinger claims a 0-60 time of just 4.5 seconds, and it certainly looks quick on the track.

A second video shows more footage from the test track, with the Bollinger team putting the B1 through its paces, then checking it to make sure it can stand up to the abuse:

VIDEO

So far, the Bollinger B1 is looking pretty good, and seeing it in motion has us only more excited for its launch (and hopefully a chance behind the wheel). We’re also hoping for more footage from Bollinger in the near future. We’d love to see the B1 in off-road testing.

Need a refresher on what the Bollinger B1 is all about? The company also created a

technical animation

of the electric truck, giving us a look at what’s under the surface.

Related Video:

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Amazon’s Next Alexa Device Is… a Pair of Smart Glasses?

When it comes to smart speakers, Amazon’s Alexa is already out to a big lead. But with refreshed Home speakers coming from Google not to mention Apple, Sonos, and others soon to be joining the fray with their own sound systems featuring built-in digital assistants, Amazon has no time to rest on its laurels. To help bring the power of Alexa to places where a regular Echo might not be able to go, Amazon is reportedly getting ready to make an Alexa-powered pair of smart glasses.

But don’t get any visions of these smart glasses looking like an updated take on the awkward Google Glass from back in 2013 . According to a new report from the Financial Times, Amazon’s upcoming smartglasses will instead rely on a tethered wireless connection to your phone and a bone-conducting audio systems to project sound into your noggin without the need for headphones.

While this might sound a bit ridiculous, it would be a relatively simple and unobtrusive way for people to have a digital assistant in their ear at all times. Apple does it with the AirPods, and the Google Assistant is on basically every Android phone made in the last year and a half. But without its own handsets, Amazon needs to find a different way stay relevant on mobile.

Additionally, Bluetooth radios and batteries have gotten pretty small, and with Amazon’s growing clothing and fashion portfolio, the company could offer the new smartglasses in a range of styles. Then again, it’s not like there aren’t Alexa-powered headphones already on the market, and those didn’t exactly set the world on fire.

Along with the new smartglasses, the Financial Times also reported that a new Amazon home security camera is on the way. The internet-connected camera will be integrated in with Amazon’s other Echo devices so that users could watch the security cam’s feed on something like the Echo Show. It’s not super exciting and it seems like a logical addition to growing family of devices, which means it will probably happen.

But if Amazon’s real master plan is to have a microphone connected to Alexa anywhere you go, home or away, the rumored smart glasses could be what Amazon needs to bring Alexa out the living room and into the world—especially after the Echo Tap failed to live up to expectations.

[Financial Times]

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How to (Maybe) Play the Super Secret Copy of NES Golf Hidden on Your Nintendo Switch [Update]

Image: Gizmodo/Screenshot

Last weekend, a user calling themselves yellows8, posted an intriguing discovery to SwitchBrew.org, a site dedicated to finding ways to hack the Nintendo Switch. Hidden on every Switch console is a mysterious game called Flog, which turns out to be an emulated version of the 1984 NES game Golf upgraded with motion controls. An even bigger mystery was finding a way to actually play the game, and it turns out it’s far from easy.

Why Golf? Satoru Iwata was Nintendo’s fourth president and CEO, but he was also a coder, and in 1984 he created his own data compression tool to squeeze a golf game, complete with 18 holes, onto an NES cartridge. Unfortunately, on July 11, 2015, Iwata passed away from complications resulting from a bile duct tumor he had had removed a year before. It’s not known how the NES Golf game found its way into the Switch’s firmware, but accessing it reveals it was almost definitely put there by someone at Nintendo as a tribute to Iwata.

Unfortunately, launching Golf isn’t as easy as just entering the Konami code, or any combination of button presses. For starters, as testers on the GBA Temp forums and SwitchBrew have discovered, the Switch’s internal clock first has to match the date of Iwata’s passing, July 11. If you’ve ever connected your Switch to the internet, there’s currently no way to access the Golf game, because the console’s internal clock automatically syncs itself to network time. But if your Switch has never been online, that internal clock syncs itself to what’s been user-specified in the settings, which means you can simply hop into the Switch’s settings and dial back the clock to July 11.

It gets a little easier after that, but only slightly. With the date adjustment made, you need to head back to the Switch’s main menu, and detach each Joy-Con. With a controller in each hand, you then need to reproduce a very specific motion that Iwata had used in a Nintendo Direct presentation. With both arms down, hold each Joy-Con pointing downwards, and then raise your hands until the controllers are in front of your face, in a vertical position. If you’ve done everything right, after holding that pose for a moment, the classic NES Golf game will supposedly automatically launch, as several videos posted online, including one from the BBC, have shown.

Unfortunately, the success rate for getting this to reliably work has been abysmal. As SwitchBrew points out, there is additional Switch criteria that needs to be met for this Easter Egg to be revealed, and so far no one has been able to figure out exactly what those are. Some testers have also been trying to find ways to completely reset their internet-connected Switches back to factory conditions, but that involves dismantling the units and removing backup batteries, which doesn’t seem worth it?

Only a handful of testers have managed to get Golf to load, and so far no one has posted a complete, unedited video of the entire unlocking process (including the BBC). To make matters worse, the game doesn’t seem to be completely finished, and actually playing a round using motion controls and the Switch’s Joy-Cons has proven to be confusing. It’s a fun Easter Egg, but your time will probably be better spent unlocking all of Breath of the Wild’s secrets instead.

[SwitchBrew.org via Ars Technica]

Update, 1:39 p.m. EST/EDT: Earlier today, YouTube user fire3element posted what appears to be a complete walk-through of getting the Nintendo Switch to load Golf, including updating the system’s date, and the requisite Joy-Con motions.

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Equifax Has Been Sending Consumers to a Fake Phishing Site for Almost Two Weeks

Equifax’s response to its data breach has been a total shitshow and the company seems determined to remind us of this each and every day.

For nearly two weeks, the company’s official Twitter account has been directing users to a fake lookalike website, the sole purpose of which is to expose Equifax’s reckless response to the breach.

After announcing the breach, Equifax directed its customers to equifaxsecurity2017.com, a website where they can enroll in identity theft protection services and find updates about how Equifax is handing the “cybersecurity incident.”

But the decision to create “equifaxsecurity2017” in the first place was monumentally stupid. The URL is long and it doesn’t look very official—that means it’s going to be very easy to emulate. Fake versions of the site could be used to phish Equifax customers and steal their personal information, again. A much safer choice would have been to create a subdomain on the Equifax website (equifax.com) and direct users there.

To illustrate how idiotic Equifax’s decision was, developer Nick Sweeting created a fake website of his own: securityequifax2017.com. (He simply switched the words “security” and “equifax” around.) Sweeting’s website looks slightly different than the official Equifax website, as you can see below, but only because he isn’t actually trying to dupe anyone:

Fake Equifax breach-response site created by Nick Sweeting.

Sweeting’s intentions clearly aren’t malicious. If anything, he’s trying to demonstrate why Equifax needs to shut down its website, or at least transfer it elsewhere, so it isn’t further exposing consumers to risk.

As if to demonstrate Sweeting’s point, Equifax appears to have been itself duped by the fake URL. The company has directed users to Sweeting’s fake site sporadically over the past two weeks. Gizmodo found eight tweets containing the fake URL dating back to September 9th:

Equifax directing users to a fake phishing website.

Each of the tweets containing Sweeting’s URL is signed by someone at Equifax named “Tim.” The latest tweet was sent out September 19th. (Equifax deleted this tweet Wednesday morning, but at the time of writing the other seven tweets were still live.)

“It’s in everyone’s interest to get Equifax to change this site to a reputable domain,” Sweeting told Gizmodo. “I knew it would only cost me $10 to set up a site that would get people to notice, so I just did it.”

The real Equifax site is dangerous, he said, because of how easy it is to impersonate. “It only took me 20 minutes to build my clone. I can guarantee there are real malicious phishing versions already out there.”

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Electric bus sets record with 1,101-mile trip on a single charge

Think it was impressive when a Tesla club drove a Model S nearly 670 miles? It has nothing on what Proterra just managed. The startup just drove a Catalyst E2 Max electric bus a whopping 1,101.2 miles on a single charge. That’s the furthest any EV has managed before recharging, and well past the 1,013.8 miles driven by the previous record-holder, a one-seat experimental car nicknamed "Boozer." It’s not hard to see how Proterra managed the feat when you know about the technology, but this still bodes well for eco-friendly public transportation.

Not surprisingly, a bus can hold a much larger battery than just about any regular car. The Catalyst E2 Max carries 660kWh, or nearly nine times the capacity of a 75kWh Tesla Model S. Also, Proterra was driving in optimal conditions, with no passengers, no stops and a gentle test track. It’d be another story with a fully-laden bus wending its way through a city.

Even so, that kind of range is very promising. In many cases, it could likely handle a long bus route for several hours — it might only need to recharge at the end of a driver’s shift. While it could take an hour or more to top up even with Proterra’s fast charging system, bus drivers are no strangers to changing vehicles. The first E2 series buses are due to reach Los Angeles streets later in 2017, so it might not be long before you can witness this longevity first-hand.

Via: Ars Technica

Source: Proterra

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