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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BL
Posts
3
Comments
1,094
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Breaking things is a valid way to start learning. Reading man pages is very often difficult and confusing for new users. And much of the documentation is crap anyway-- it's why distro forums exist. And I'm from a time when distro upgrades/updates were sometimes dicey, (they still can break things on occasions), and you complied your kernel and drivers from scratch.

  • Ask your city clerk about it. That person can tell you what the city/county/township meeting format is and how to participate. But basically, you go to the meeting, bring some photos to support your claim, and discuss the matter like a civil human being. It's not rocket surgery. You don't need a lawyer either.

  • I went and argued my taxes at my annual township tax assessment meeting. I was being assessed for a new deck and ramp. That added about $200 to my taxes. What I did do was move the wheelchair ramp out away from the house a bit for better winter time safety and repaired the steps, ramp boards, and railings.

    Should I have been taxed for a whole new deck and ramp when I just did repairs and made safety changes?

  • I have taught math for 4 years in my local school. The iPads were used by the 3rd and 4th grade students. And they never left the classrooms and were well supervised during use.

    Starting in 5th grade, they were issued Chromebooks. Google Classroom was used for assignments and other communications. And since Mommy and Daddy had to pay for them IF they were damaged, they held up quite well. The IBM Education model is very robust. Not fast, but robust.

  • Which businesses? Foreign companies or local ones? Do you wish to have your money shipped overseas to purchase a vacuum cleaner? Or would you rather pay a bit more and have you hard earned dollars stay here in at home to help pay wages to your neighbors?

  • There is a balance to it. Yes, local manufacturing will make things more expensive. But making more durable goods tends to pay better wages for more people. And let's be honest here, most people can't be a doctor or write code. High paying collage degrees are beyond them. Or we can maintain low paying retail jobs for the majority of people.

    But the is a balance and it can't be done over night without causing large amounts of economic pain to many people.

  • The "flu shot" tends to be variable in it's effectiveness from year to year. It's a guessing game the CDC play with those virii. They are/were trying to guess what the vaccine needs to be months in advance. This year it seems they missed a bit and it didn't work quite as well.

    The future seems bleak on having those shots available for the foreseeable future.

  • And what about Qidi? Everyone misses this brand. But they offer some well priced core xy printers with features no one else does. And the ability to print high end engineering filaments right out of the box.

  • Even non-profits need to make a profit somehow. They have operating expenses and need to build a cash cushion much like a for profit business.

    Now, Prusa is and always has been a privately owned business and Josef wants to makes money, got to keep the lights on somehow and pay his employees you know. So Prusa is a normal business with a generally "Do no Evil" company outlook and the constraints of trying to be a successful business in the EU.

    And despite the higher price that gets forced by trying to operate in the EU, this should make Prusa a more desirable place to do 3D printing business for all those who want to be socially responsible over another very popular brand based in China. But, evidently a cheaper price cuts a lot of slack for most.

    Full disclosure: I own a Prusa Mk3s and a Bambu Mini.

  • There are recognized standards for piping and plumbing around the world. Which one do you use?

    The issue is the longevity of the stuff. It lasts for decades and even generations. And over that time period we change the standards as new ideas and materials come into play. As a home owner, I have had to adapt new standards to nearly 100 year old standards. I've owned houses that had clay, cast iron, copper, galvanized steel, and pex randomly shotgunned into the house as every previous owner had done changes over time.

    It would be nice it all piping and plumbing as identical around the world, but it ain't gonna happen, (and don't at me with the "metric would solve all that." Are you talking DIN or JIT or even what ever BS the Chinese are doing today).

  • If you look at the wavy lines around the inlay, that's ringing. It has to do with resonances in the printer itself. The latest hotness to get some control of this type of artifact is called input shaping. On newer printers, like the Bambu, they have an accerometer built into the printer. (And my Bambu mini will do that resonance test EVERY new print-- until I commented it out. It's not needed that often).

    Since you are running klipper, you can do input shaping adjustments quite easily. Do NOT GUESS at values. You can damage your printer that way. The documentation is very good to try and help with making improvements. You may also want to re-adjust your Acceleration after you do the resonance testing. In fact I highly recommend you run all these tests after you build an enclosure for your printer. For your extra large prints, cooling and layer time can become quite important also to prevent warping.

  • This person should probably have watched this video first that posted here yesterday. 80% infill seems to be about the break even point for the biggest gains. No 100% infill really needed in the real world of FDM.

    Something, something, 80% rule strikes again and just because you can do something doesn't mean you should.

  • The mini's are the latest new hotness for desktop computing. I've been running a dirt cheap $90US, mini for 2 years now. It fits extremely well on my desk, just tucked in under the monitor leaving plenty of room for all the other tasks I do daily.

    Will it play the latest hot new video game? Nope. But it will run OnlyOffice, FreeCAD and FreeDoom just fine.

  • I switched my trusty old Mk3s+ over to klipper a few weeks ago. It was even easy enough to add an accelerometer for input shaping too. While still not as fast as the Bambu mini sitting next to it, I have increased the printing speed to 70mm/s to 90mm/s for quality prints. And I can achieve a bit over 100mm/s print speeds with a small drop in quality.

    It will give the old girl more years of useful life.

  • The Bambu printers are quite locked down. So you are only getting the functionality they want you to have. So the Core One, (Marlin) or Qidi, (Mainsail and klipper), might be your best choice. Crealty seems to be improving with their new models. But their past history makes me very leery yet. I lean to Prusa because I've owned one for 5 years now and they still support it. Customer support is valuable to me and worth the extra cost in the purchase price.