Thank you! I got here at the great Reddit migration, all this time lemmy.ca has been extremely reliable. I've had a great time. Just want to say I appreciate the time, knowledge and effort you put in it.
I definitely want to build a Voron myself someday, but I'm now looking at getting a Qidi q1p first so that I have something to use, and can print the printable parts myself. It sounds like I'd need to take a week off work to build a Voron
Thank you! I should convince my lab to buy the Mk4s to Core One upgrade kit, especially with the health aspect. It's a big lab with ventilation, most of my colleagues only print PLA, but we print a lot. The extra speed will make the mechanical engineers very happy.
Personally I'm starting to lean towards getting a small QIDI printer now, and build a Voron 2 next year with hopefully Bondtech's prospective INDX. That would be the perfect setup for me.
I had seen a video for INDX and totally forgot about it! With how it works it seems more comparable to the Prusa XL, if it ends up being something I can afford I'd totally go for that
It's really a small inconvenience, but using an adapter would mean I'd be prone to misplace it when I use my headphones on anything else, so it hardly makes anything better
No earphone jack again. That's a bit sad. Even though I mainly use BLT earbuds, I still sometimes wish I could use my wired headphones. It's just a small inconvenience
Thanks! I've only heard about Qidi recently, but they seem to have a really good reputation. I saw someone mention that they're planning a multi-color system, if i decide for QIDI I will probably wait for that or look into Box Turtle.
I mostly print PLA and I don't care too much about print speed, so I didn't think the core one will really bring much advantage.
As for looking at IDEX, it's more because it looks really cool. I'd like to be able to combine pla with tpu or petg, but realistically I don't think I need it enough to justify the cost. I'll get a lot more use out of a multi colour system like an MMU.
I'm not sure if Rollerdrome might be your thing, but I enjoyed it. You play as a girl competing in a roller-skating death arena. It's a bit like Tony hawk games, but combat plays a huge role, it's very satisfying and it's very well integrated with the rollerskating. I really enjoyed the first ten or so scenarios, but I'm not so good at score based games so I never finished it.
I was trying for the second time to enjoy animal well. I kind of see how it's a great game, but playing it feels like torture to me. I'm constantly second-guessing myself whenever I'm stuck, I don't know if I haven't figured out the puzzle, suck at platforming, or missing a tool.
I was telling a colleague about how my department started using Rust for some parts of our projects lately. (normally Python was good enough for almost everything but we wanted to try it out)
They asked me why we're not using MATLAB. They were not joking. So, I can at least tell you their reasoning. It was their first programming language in university, it's safer and faster than Python, and it's quite challenging to use.
Thank you! I got here at the great Reddit migration, all this time lemmy.ca has been extremely reliable. I've had a great time. Just want to say I appreciate the time, knowledge and effort you put in it.