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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)AL
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2 yr. ago

  • We call that pseudocode and it looks fine to me. No computer will run it natively (AI meat grinders aside), but most devs will be able to pick up on the logic and convert it to actual code.

    Disclaimer: am a programmer.

    Edit: as an aside, manually dealing with time is its own form of madness and is usually best left to libraries (ie other people's code) whenever possible.

  • I'm not sure I could say I'm the sole producer, most of my mods are cases where the original author has stepped away from modding and I saw an opportunity to add some improvements of my own while carrying on the torch (I stand on the shoulders of giants and all). I think I'm most known for Camping Stuff and Snowy Trees, since those are the mods that I started with, but I've since adopted a few more, but if you're interested in the full list, here's my Steam / GitHub

  • I maintain a handful of RimWorld mods, going on about 6 years now. They're in a pretty stable and mature place so they don't take too up much effort, but I do check for Steam commens a few times a day, to make sure nobody found any bugs or major issues.

  • I highly recommend Orca Slicer, it's forked from bamboo slicer (which is in turn forked from Prusa), so has their modern UI/ layout and natively, as well as natively support bamboo printers. If Bamboo's not your jam, it also plays very nicely with Klipper. As an added bonus, it regularly gets new features added or ported from the other slicers.

  • I don't personally own one, so that's really good to know! I mostly thought of it since it checked most of what OP was looking for, without being a full on Voron. That's said, I'm not sure how much of a beginner machine the Core One will be either. Regardless, I'll add a proceed with caution on my recommendation.

    Out of curiosity, what upgrades did you have to make to sv08?

    (I also graduated from the Thessian Ender 3 program and went to a v2.4)

  • I just realized that there are some important questions that none of us are asking (it sounded like you've already done some research, and have an idea of what you want (or at least what you think you need), but just so that everyone's all on that same page):

    1. What are you looking to get out of the hobby?
    2. What is your tolerance for tinkering? Or in other words, are you willing to learn and fiddle with the machine or would you rather it "just work"?
    3. What kinds of things are you looking to print (not necessarily mutually exclusive categories: big things, small details, multi-color, outdoor/ automotive, etc)
    4. What's your budget?
  • Depending on how much you value open source vs domestic production, part of me thinks that you may want to consider the Sovol SV08. Sovol is based out of China, but that printer is basically a Voron 2.4 modified for mass production (ie much of the printer comes preassembled), and because of it the printer is very open source, as in here's the GitHub repo. My only major concern would be that the machine ships with a non-standard hot end, however I recently learned (Here) that the community already has a mod to fix that. You also gain a much bigger build volume, for a fraction of the upfront investment. (Edit: That said, it may not be the most beginner friendly machine in existence (see replies))

    I'm also somewhat hesitant to recommend a machine that isn't out and doesn't really have any reviews yet. With any new product launch like this, I'd almost guarantee that there will be a teething period as the bugs, glitches, and hiccups all get worked out (as goes the early adopter tax). Which means that you may face a slightly steeper leaning curve as someone new to the hobby (Prusa has been around for a hot minute, so I don't expect it to be too bad, but it's still worth mentioning). That said, if none of that scares you and if you're already prepared for the pricetag, Prusa's are known to be absolute workhorses, there's no reason they can't be entry level machines.

  • True, you can have a quality closed source product (look at Bamboo or Stratasys), it's more lamenting than at one point Prusa was THE open source die hard (and that's earned them a fair bit of goodwill in a community that generally respects that (on account of only existing because of open source culture)).

    Needing to make money is completely valid and understandable, which is what makes this less of an outright outrage and more of an "I'm not angry, I'm just disappointed" kind of situation.

  • Agreed, it's nice to see Prusa put up a modern consumer printer, but for the price I didn't see anything in the announcement that would make it easier to recommend over the bamboo for the "I need it to just work" folks or the SV08/ voron for the folks that like to tinker (and value not living in a walled garden, Sovol's hot end/ nozzles not withstanding).

    Having just built an LDO 2.4 kit a few months ago, I have no regrets. The 350 kit + printed forward parts weren't that much more expensive than what this is slated to retail at, but I get a comparatively massive build volume, nerd cred, and the open source nature means that I can tweak, mod, or otherwise upgrade to my hearts content, from being able to run whatever hot end/ extruder I damn well please, to custom parts (hell, I've already swapped the tool head mount for Vitalii's metal one- not quite the COTS ethos of the voron design, but about a thousand times easier line up and tension, worth every penny), or more complicated projects like ERCF or Box Turtle.

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  • The etymology might help break down some of the nuance here

    According to etymonline the etymology for expatriate (often shortened to expat) is:

    "to banish, send out of one's native country," 1768, modeled on French expatrier "banish" (14c.), from ex- "out of" (see ex-) + patrie "native land," from Latin patria "one's native country," from pater (genitive patris) "father" (see father (n.); also compare patriot). Related: Expatriated; expatriating. The noun is by 1818, "one who has been banished;" main modern sense of "one who chooses to live abroad" is by 1902.

    Immigrate, is similar, but is more used to describe moving to a place:

    "to pass into a place as a new inhabitant or resident," especially "to move to a country where one is not a native, for the purpose of settling permanently there," 1620s, from Latin immigratus, past participle of immigrare "to remove, go into, move in," from assimilated form of in- "into, in, on, upon" (from PIE root *en "in") + migrare "to move" (see migration). Related: Immigrated; immigrating.

    The closer synonym to expatriate would probably be emigrate, the opposite of immigrate, to leave a place.

    As to why one might use expatriate over emigrate; consider the sentence "I'm an American immigrant". It's kind of unclear if you're trying to say that you are an American that has migrated to another country (as in "I'm an American immigrant living in Brussels"), or someone who has migrated to America (as in "I'm an American immigrant from Slovakia"). Using expatriate removes the ambiguity: "I'm an American expatriate" and makes it clear that the speaker is trying to convey where they are from.

    technically, using emigrant here would be more clear, but English is a lawless and lazy language

  • I'm a software engineer and I think one of my personal favorite random applications of Pythagoras/ trig was in my data visualization class back in scool. The assignment was to take a dataset of Soviet space launches with dogs and display it in an interactive approachable manner (ie less rigorous data science and more local science center), so I thought it would be fun to show rockets for each lauch and animate them rotating around the earth. Queue the trig to place each icon an appropriate distance (scaled to the launch height in my data), angle, and spacing from the earth.

    I'll admit it doesn't come up all that often (in web development), but it's nice to have that foundational knowledge to dredge up when I need it.