Really cool, but this seems like it will be severely limited on printers that are not using a rotating bed and hinged only in one side. With that construction, speed and accuracy is definitely not going to be the best. Still, some amount of angling of the nozzle could provide some benefits to handling overhangs, even if its only 15-20 degrees.
Yeah I'm having issues right now with material being super sticky and building up on the nozzle. after 30min of printing it has this blob of filament buildup on the nozzle which hits the print.
I do actually print from a dryer, but it has been stored in a non-sealing box for a while without silica, so maybe it's just too wet. I'm just not hearing the usual crackling of wet filament at all.
The job post also notes that such a teleoperation center requires “building highly optimized low latency reliable data streaming over unreliable transports in the real world.” Tele-operators can be “transported” into the robotaxi via a “state-of-the-art VR rig,” it adds.
Oh man that's pretty hilarious for "autonomous vehicles"
Tesla would not be the first robotaxi company to use this method. In fact, it’s an industry standard. It was previously reported that Cruise, the robotaxi company owned by General Motors, was employing remote human assistants to troubleshoot when its vehicles ran into trouble
Oh, so this is actually completely normal and should not be news worthy...
Depends on whether it's first-on-top or last-on-top...hot/popular biases engagement in obscure ways we can't see through, which often (always?) ends up favouring trolls and rage-bait.
That's regionally specific then, because they sure as hell don't do that where i live (EU member). They have to compare with non-sale price within a month or something, so it's complete bullshit here because they artificially inflate prices prior to black Friday "sales".
Constantly turning it on/off will probably kill the disk faster than the power savings can make up for it, compared to just having it idle when not actively used.
Fair enough. But even if you don't run on PV and actually do transcode 24/7/365, it's still only 5€/month. They idle at around 1/3 to 1/2 that though, which is arguably better for the disk than being turned on/off all the time, so you still get the bulk of the savings while extending disk lifetime.
Sure it's 100kWh in a year, so it's a few bucks per month saved. But in reality it's likely even less than half that saved, because the majority of the time it's probably not under transcoding loads.
I don't really care TBH, it's (probably) a joke so it doesn't have to be accurate to the real life circumstances and then it works better when people actually substitute the correct words IMO.
Really cool, but this seems like it will be severely limited on printers that are not using a rotating bed and hinged only in one side. With that construction, speed and accuracy is definitely not going to be the best. Still, some amount of angling of the nozzle could provide some benefits to handling overhangs, even if its only 15-20 degrees.