This one? https://youtu.be/0Hwjmek0Uvw
It more addresses survivability in space, but unfortunately not the „drain earth of its atmosphere“ thing. Then again, in game the portal was closed quickly again.
I remember that video, but I‘m not sure it is comparable — air might flow faster than water [citation needed] and there might be less of it [citation needed].
Thanks, this sounds really useful. Patch T sounds like some manual sorting work, but I guess with the option to reuse those separator pages it is still better than manual splitting or - worse - single scanning.
I haven’t looked into paperless-ai yet, but I hope my machine would be beefy enough for this task — worst case I guess it might take a little longer to process all docs.
Now I only still need to decide on a good archiving method. I read some article a long time ago about the pros and cons of different document archiving methods used by professional archivers. Some prefer horizontal stacking in boxes, while others prefer vertical stacks in vertical boxes. Pretty interesting nerdy topic 😀
Interesting approach with the ASN — haven’t started using that feature yet. If I understand correctly, you add a QR ASN to each document you need to keep a physical copy of? And that sticker also has the ASN in human readable form?
So you would then add many documents at once to the feeder, and Paperless will read the QR and also split documents whenever a new code appears?
What about documents you don’t want to keep physically? Is there a way to get Paperless to split them automatically as well if you add many to the feeder?
Bookmarked. Though I guess it comes down to an „I can return my printer and get a full or partial refund“? Which, as long as no good alternative presents itself, doesn’t help me.
I know we don’t want to talk alternatives here, but that might still be an interesting discussion to have, once we get there.
Like I said, I’m just playing devils advocate to understand the full picture better.
The LAN being secure might not be an issue for you and me, but the average user might not be so skilled. Though I understand your point that LAN security should not be Bambu‘s concern.
Regarding your NFT argument: I agree this is a valid concern, especially with the proxy being able to see everything sent to the printer. Though I hope the dev mode they promised would be enough to avoid that for now.
But don't they currently allow local connections and also use them if the printer is running in cloud mode? I would assume if the printer can be "seen" by your machine locally, Bambu Studio would connect locally for some of its data transfer? Regardless of printer configuration (LAN only or Cloud) it still has its local ports open, which currently can be used by e.g. Home Assistant without any cloud connection. This is nice, but at the same time can be a security risk, as any local malware might also send commands. So a way to secure the local connections is definitely needed.
API keys would be nice for any type of connection, but it's something they'd need to implement, including a way to request/revoke them from either your Bambu account (cloud again, not preferred by the open source community) or directly from the printer (might be a hassle to use with the P1S' small screen). Instead they decided to go full-throttle by using some form of certificate authentication, possibly using per-device and per-account certs in the future, that might be generated locally and signed by their endpoints using your Bambu account.
The question would be whether other brands share their SOC with CarPlay to do so?