Ooo, I’ll have to check this out. Thank you
Just a geek, finding my way in the fediverse.
Ooo, I’ll have to check this out. Thank you
Ah, delete the windows partition. That should keep me safe.
There was a big headline recently about a tech company accidentally hiring a North Korean “hacker” (I’m just going off the headline) so that might be fresh in memory with regards to your laptop farm reference.
I haven’t read the manual but I don’t think you’re supposed to cook your glasses.
I bought a topo map a few weeks ago for a backpacking trip. Electronics are heavier and less suitable for that purpose in my opinion.
I can confirm two in use simultaneously and a total of three connected (2 xbone, 1 PS5) but we were playing a two player only game. I would assume that if the game supports it, the deck would too.
… But that’s an assumption :)
EDIT: to clarify - the wireless connectivity support is from the deck, not the dock.
Same. I go through periods of printing a lot then getting busy and not touching it for months. I’ve noticed my PLA and PLA+ get really brittle as they age even when stored in a dry box and drying again before use.
I can usually get it to print but I have to be gentle with it.
Currently migrating a massive monolithic Java application to microservices… The circle of life continues.
Want to just swap jobs in ~5 years to keep the cycle going? You can migrate this project back to a Java monolith and I’ll migrate your monolith back to micros :D
"Minecraft is proof that banning child labor was wrong. The children yearn for the mines "
I like to call myself a codemonkey
Do you work with me? I’m in the US south and my EU colleagues love “y’all” and have started using it (ironically or not :) pretty often.
Warms my heart.
Other recommendations are great but you could also try some type of adhesive AFTER you’ve eliminated any other potential problem sources.
It does look a over extruded. Have you calibrated your esteps? I always need to do that when changing filament types and sometimes even between rolls of the same filament type (especially bargain bin PLA from amzn)
My ender 3 with a textured glass bed sticks perfect with PLA and nothing else. For some reason PLA+ tends to lift. Glue stick helped with PLA+ but I hated dealing with because it REALLY stuck so I switched to masking tape. That does the job and is easier to remove. On my CR-10 with plain glass bed (no texture) I use hairspray… Mostly because that’s what the guy I bought it from recommended and, to be honest, it does work amazingly. Nothing sticks to that glass plate bed without an adhesive but it pops right off once the bed cools down.
That said, I don’t recommend “extra” adhesives unless you’re fully sure you’ve solved any other potential problems. They can be a help/bandaid but if the root cause is something else then you’re just masking it.
Some materials and beds need some help, some don’t. I primarily use PLA and PLA+ with the occasional PETG and TPU.
Is the eye murdering deck OLED PWM flicker problem in this video?
I’m on mobile with very little bandwidth so I can’t check.
The sites shouldn’t have to maintain that but browsers should?
Also, some browsers are open source.
There’s so many problems with this idea that I don’t know where to start. But, I do see where you’re coming from.
Playing the long troll game by burying your nudes for some poor sap in the future to find.
I respect that.
Next you’ll start seeing your nose
(Sorry)
I’ve noticed over the last few years that you can always find new releases but “old” material is increasingly unavailable. .
Want the new super hero movie that released last week? Easy.
Want 1984’s “The Last Starfighter”? Good luck…
Yep, that’s why I made sure to include that “we all know how fun BIOS RAID is” bit.
It was fine with the previous 2TB RAID1, but that doesn’t mean anything.
I’ve been on mint for ages but when I updated my RAID this year it originally wouldn’t recognize it. I eventually got it recognized but it capped the 16TB drives at 999GB for some reason. For fun, I went up the chain to Ubuntu… Same thing
In frustration I went to Grandma’s house with Debian and it worked perfect out of the box. I’d spent hours researching it but the best I found was a potential RAID related bug (lvm, specifically, I think) introduced in Ubuntu that, of course, filtered into Mint. Even fdisk reported the physical drives as 999GB in Mint/Ubuntu.
I still don’t know the exact cause but I got it up and running so I’m a Debian guy now, I guess.
Granted, my use case isn’t super normal since I’m using a BIOS RAID1 (and we all know how fun BIOS RAID can be) with full disk encryption.
Worked out in the end but it made me sad to ditch Mint
Damn, beat me to it.
I can also recommend this service.