After watching the video I’m not certain what it could be, but I’ve heard similar before from my printer so I’ll list them in order of sound similarity:
My X belt wasn’t fully aligned in its track and it was rubbing on the side, which caused a similar clicked noise when any X move occurred.
When there too much pressure in the hot end (from a clog, low temp, or too close to the bed, etc), I’ve seen the filament “kicking back” out of the extruder. Watch for a sudden backwards jerk of the filament.
My X stepper motor made some terrible noises after tightening the associated belt. I’m not sure what’s causing it exactly, but I’m replacing the stepper soon.
No, the model does retain the original works in a lossy compression. This is evidenced by the fact that you can get a model to reproduce sections of its training data
That sounds plausible. To add more speculation though, it seems nuts that an automated system can use IFF to make sure the firing line is clear of friendlies
After using an M2 MacBook Air with only 8gb for the past few years, I really wouldn’t worry about the ram. Now that 16gb is the base model you’ll be fine, you won’t ever need to upgrade it.
Seriously macOS just doesn’t use a ton of ram and it handles ram pressure extremely well. I do a most of my development work on only 8gb of ram
After watching the video I’m not certain what it could be, but I’ve heard similar before from my printer so I’ll list them in order of sound similarity: