The humidity issue IMO is often overblown. It's really environment specific. In my old place my relative humidity was 35% so wet filament was never a problem. It'd be good to get a hygrometer to see where you're at before you start buying fancy filament dryers or accidentally melting your spools in the oven. If your area is generally high humidity then it can help. With PLA though it's not going to make a huge difference.
Printing really is fun! But there's so much to troubleshoot, it's a time sink to get things right. My 2nd printer is down from a dead fan, one of these days I need to solder the broken wire back on.
But once your printer is tuned, oh boy it's satisfying
Hard to know what's going on without pictures. Could be any number of things. My first thought is over-extrusion if the nozzle is catching your print and knocking it over. Or maybe you need Z hop between layers. I've only used Prusaslicer so can't say what to do to help in Cura. If you've completely replaced the hot end, you should be re-tuning your printer (PID tuning for correct temps, e-steps for correct extrusion amounts, etc). If it's adhesion problems where the print isn't sticking to the bed, applying some glue stick can help keep things secure.
Thanks for the tip on the Postgres changes! Went back and looked at the 1.95.0 changes and followed the instructions there for fixing it. This seems to have solved my issue!
Will get updating now! Since the last update my server hasn't been accessible and I've been too lazy to figure out why (Portainer shows it up, but the server container quickly goes offline). Hopefully I can get this fixed today.
That 20% down payment in today's market is just atrocious. We're getting ready to sell our home and we will profit maybe 80k, and that's still not enough for a detached 3-bedroom home in our area. We'll likely need to dip into our 401k to get up to 20% to avoid PMI
That's his main channel with the higher production skits. There's also his side channel at https://youtube.com/@TomSkaAndFriends which has a lot of great content as well. If you don't find him funny, that's a valid opinion since we have different views on what's comedic. But assuming he's turned into some "erratic psycho" is just rude.
The shock comedy is mainly his Surfshark ads, and even then the shock ones are few and far between. They're mainly just comedy sketches. If you've ever seen any of the asdfmovie sketches, that's him. One of his best videos is his in-depth review of Thomas the Tank Engine.
Couple other favorites from his main channel (Where the higher production skits are) are Let Me In and The Hole.
You're taking a couple comments at face value, when the actual creator goes into detail about each one of his ads and the thought process about them. He's legitimately a great guy and creator who does his best to be respectful with what he does. He's very upfront that his content isn't made for kids, including the best content warnings I've seen a content creator do on their media.
You should actually watch some of his videos then. He's doesn't complain about being censored and he fully supports the advertising agency's rulings. In the violent ones that were "banned" (just cut out of their respective videos), he fully agrees he was pushing the envelope which was entirely his intention.
Yup, this is how I explain FDM printing to friends. It's like a giant hot glue gun, layer one layer at a time. Except instead of a giant hole for glue, it's a 0.4mm hole, really tiny.
The humidity issue IMO is often overblown. It's really environment specific. In my old place my relative humidity was 35% so wet filament was never a problem. It'd be good to get a hygrometer to see where you're at before you start buying fancy filament dryers or accidentally melting your spools in the oven. If your area is generally high humidity then it can help. With PLA though it's not going to make a huge difference.