Easier to get playing, at least.
Put rectangle in rectangle.
Toggle Power.
Enjoy.
Its seriously a bigger hassle to figure out where you were in a show on Netflix if it decided not to save your spot in a show than it is to get into a level in a lot of games back in the day.
I've been trying to set up a space for this split keyboard/Accessability computer stuff, and I have, like, five 50gb hard drives from yeeears ago. ( I was the designated data backer-upper of the friend/family circle)
I could see how things could get out of hand for the true memelord
I doubt it, seeing as all the cavity consists of tapered shapes. A mushroom would leave behind some evidence of being sealed inside, and the mushroom cap structure grows above ground, while spuds grow buried underneath soil. It logistically doesn't quite check out IMO.
What I suspect happens in these kinds of shapes- and I see them fairly often -is that the potato simply expands as it grows, and it just pulls apart at some point of stress, kinda like a warped piece of wood.
Except its an oblate spheroid, so it "cracks" in the center.
This could be some kind of encapsulated material, I don't know the details of how potatoes protect themselves from foreign bodies.
But, in theory, there could be some kinda dead fungus in there, slain by a potato-based void...?
I am talking about though is SLA printing though- resin printing, but without the resin, basically.
Which is why I think its more feasible than just extrusion printing on principle. The layers are incredibly thin, with no extrusion involved, and no exposure to air until well after the layers are formed.
Interesting, I was under the impression that clay was inert when ingested.
The transportation and dust would be lessened from the printing process if it were done by the individual, but if what you say is true, then the whole idea is worthless unless there's an alternative material available.
Well, in this hypothetical I'm proposing, there is no superheating involved- just printing, and being set to dry.
Ceramics get completely rigid, but relatively fragile in this state, which would be sufficient for a single use material, but if they're soaked for long enough, would dissolve.
The term is "Bone Dry" and specifically how to reclaim bone dry clay- that'd probably give you an idea on how it breaks down/dissolves.
there would be no straightforward way to get it back into print media unless there were recycling centers, but if one cleaned the food matter off well, in theory it could be standard clay people could use.
Imagine collecting food cup clay and making it into bricks for public projects.
The mockingbirds are so lucky the hummingbirds don't care, because they are shimmery little warrior badasses.