TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Those who do best in office positions are the ones that are particularly skilled at making it seem like they are busy and productive. Ie staying late, or getting in early
This is probably a wildly niche situation, but I learned about OSU!droid and was interested in trying it with my galaxy tab s6 lite, figuring the s pen would be a pretty perfect way to play. The only problem is that the main way to hit bursts and streams is to aim at the objects with one hand and tap the side of the screen with your offhand, but the s pen disables touch input while close to the screen. I did try just connecting my keyboard with a dongle and setting up a key map, but the game doesn't let you launch with it enabled for competitive reasons.
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
This has severance vibes
I have been loving Native Alpha. Being able to use web versions of apps and not be forced to hand over absurd privacy violating permissions is awesome. My only problem is it appears to run straight off of Chrome's web engine, and I would rather use Firefox. In large part because of extensions/addons.
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Dang that is unfortunate, I will have to figure another way about it
I am trying to design a simple case for a laptop motherboard, and thought to get around the distortion happening with my pictures by taking a 3d scan of it with Kiri Engine. Everything looks fine in the preview of it and everything, but when I import the OBJ into FreeCAD it is just grey and I can't distinguish the mounting holes from the rest of the board. Thanks in advance
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Oh wow, this is so cool!
I will take a look at this later and see if I can take inspiration from the project as a whole
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Normally I would just go out and grab one as I have done it a bit before, and I know how useful they are, I am just a bit strapped for cash at the moment. (College student who didn't manage to grab a job for summer :/)
Maybe I will make a temp solution and then make something more proper later on.
Hello! So I decided, as a way to improve my cad skills, that I would take an old laptop of mine and design a case around the motherboard and use it as a micro PC in my work area. I have nearly all of it designed, just shy of the power button. On account of not having a sautering iron, I would rather avoid sautering a button on and was trying to go a more analogue approach by printing a button into the case that could maybe use a compliant mechanism to press in and come back out, but I am very uncertain how to go about it. Any help appreciated
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
I am not certain, I have used FreeCAD tutorials for Onsdel to great success.
I think what I do is just listen to the tool name they reference, and then just look where I assume it would be to find it, rather than trying to find tools in the same places as them
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Personally I love openSCAD, but it is probably really unintuitive to someone without programming experience and even then has it's own limitations.
FreeCAD is in a weird position ATM, it is actually really good! ...just not in the stable release... The Dev version is significantly more palatable, and they even went on a feature freeze to really push through with their major 1.0 release.
For now though Onsdel (Sort of a fork of FreeCAD packaged with Dev release and UI improvements) has worked really well for me thus far!
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
I have genuinely thought this for years.
I originally thought that generational bullshit is stupid and, without any other influence, each generation is really the same as the last and the changes only really happen within the society itself. So I always thought it was stupid when people would say, "X generation is the dumbest!"
But then I realized that Boomers were hit with both massively spread lead poisoning and swaths of radiation through especially Midwest America throughout their developmental periods that it is fair enough to say that, should there be such thing as the "Dumbest Generation," it would likely be the Boomers
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Yeah that honestly makes much more sense lol
I started a print today as per usual and I randomly thought of something and am uncertain if it may already be a thing. Independent perimeter layer height. Or basically, you take the set layer height, say 0.3, divide it by a user selected amount, in this case by two, and print some number of the outermost perimeters at that height until it reaches the set layer height. In this example it would print two outer perimeters at 0.15 layer height in two layers, and then proceed with the rest of the layer. I thought this may be what variable layer height does, but it seems to vary the height of the whole layer in different regions. If there is anything like this that would be neat
TheMonkeyLord Now • 70%
This is a shit take
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
This sounds awesome! But is there anything similar that is Open Source by any chance?
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
That is only a question that can be asked after corporations are made responsible for their damages, considering they account for the VAST majority of emissions
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Conservatives: "I don't care if you are gay! Just don't do it in front of me, or in my shows!"
Also conservatives when the LGBTQ+ community has their own club that is tucked away and out of sight of straight people:
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Man steal confidential documents and gives it to conservative activists as a way to create a narrative that people are trying to provide "illegal" transgender care...
Then claims the investigation against him is political...
Gotta love the republican mindset, just claim you are a victim of whatever it is you are trying to do.
It is almost as intelligent as when children argue and one calls the other a moron, then their only response is, "No! You're the moron!"
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
Holy cow, thanks for the link! I will definitely try it out once I am finished with my next couple of projects.
I already don't use the display because OctoPI though the OctoApp is way more convenient, so no loss there lol
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
I didn't realize klilper was that powerful. That is actually crazy
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
That is quick! The SE only advertises a max of 250 mm/s with 4,000 mm/s^2 accel, so that is pretty crazy.
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
I have most definitely heard of it.
Do I know what it is, how it works, what it does? No.
I know you can run it through a raspberry pi, which is useful because I am already using one for octoprint. If it isn't crazy difficult to setup than I would definitely be willing to try it out!
I upgraded to this guy from the neo v2, and he is a beast in comparison. There isn't a premade profile on prusa for it though, so I made one using the neo as a base. Currently have the speed set to 150 mm/s and 1800 mm/s accel but was wondering what kind of speeds y'all are getting while still having consistent quality
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
I see, I don't mind going through other avenues but it is weird they still say this is an option on their website
I wanted to try out the FreeCAD beta/nightly builds, and found on the website that you could get it from the flathub beta repo. After installing though, it is just the same exact app? Did I do something wrong?
TheMonkeyLord Now • 100%
I am not a techy person, not a programmer, nada, and linux (particularly fedora) has always worked with little to no issue for me.
The hardest thing I really ever have to do is enable the rpm fusion repos on a fresh install, and the only problem I consistently encounter is discord trying to take control of, and subsequently destroy, my audio when using bluetooth headphones.
I just use it because it is an easier, privacy & user respecting system.