Yes, it would be unfortunate for a new user to experience all the horror our distinguished friend EvilSocket is telling everyone today…
Keep up the good work!
Yes, it would be unfortunate for a new user to experience all the horror our distinguished friend EvilSocket is telling everyone today…
Keep up the good work!
Did you uninstall cups and avahi?
Ender. Happened back in the days with a 3v2, the stepper drivers on the original mainboard overheat, causing it to ‘miss’ steps.
Replaced the MB with an improved version, tuned the vRef and never had any issues again.
You might look into tuning the vRef for your machine.
That’s my understanding.
And I think a small fee to get out of the googlyclaws. Paying $100 once, to host immich for the family and supporting development is a no brainer to me.
But I understand not everyone has the resources or is willing to donate.
That is not how it is supposed to look, the end result should be at least a couple of inches wide.
Maybe you don’t need to ‘fix’ your retraction settings?
If it looks good enough, why bother?
Wasn’t aware of the test (SuperSlicer user here), and found this.
The tower has multiple notches, each one corresponding to a different retraction length. By looking at the tower after printing, you can see how each retraction length affects the print quality.
So check your surface finish and select the retraction value with the best looks.
Perhaps this is an alternative?
Gonna recommend this to all my co workers.
It is not vulnerable to Windows viruses.
:-)
Blowtorch will heat this up way too hot.
Try to get it to a high enough temperature to insert filament to do a cold pull and repeat…
Electrical heat gun (paint stripper) is hot enough. Gas based torches will change the stiffness of your material and you will regret it.
Yes, physically getting bigger.
Dell XPS had a batch laptops going crazy and pushing the touchpad up.
You will recognize it :-)
https://tukaani.org/xz-backdoor/
Check the links on that page.
Thanks for the pointer.
This is really huge, but people don’t quite understand that yet.
If this wasn’t caught, every system -running public sshd- could be hacked or abused/misused.
And I completely agree with the last words, corporate should pay foss projects!
Depending on the size, but I’ve had success with super glue and baking soda.
https://www.instructables.com/Baking-Soda-Reinforcing-Glue-Repair/
Ender 3v2 as starter here, doubled the price with a lot of upgrades/modifications. Got it running rock solid with Klipper and a microswiss direct drive.
Grabbed the piggy bank and am now really satisfied with my voron 2.4.
But very pleased with the fact I started with the Ender and got to learn then basics.
As far as I can suggest anything; start with something with a large installed base, so it will be easy to find answers or (hardware) solutions to your problems. I can tell you, the installed base for Ender is large, but the quality of the hardware, is what you pay. And they are cheap…
Totally agree. People using cli are probably more skilled and their knowledge has been fed into these ai models.
So we will all end up with some mediocre level of knowledge, because the next input for the LLM 's will be more of the some old stuff. Flattening the curve and less innovation and smart ideas.
These kind of “solutions” are for a non existing problem. Looking at the investors, this is only about making money.
Forgejo ftw!
Self hosting here, also with runners to create a complete ci/cd line.
Cars. Either entertainment system or navigation or more…
BMW has quite the list of licences for opensource libraries and Linux in the about section of the car-menu.
And more and more network equipment.
Use zip, rar or other tooling to split it into parts and reassemble on the destination.
Or use another filesystem, compatible with both targets.
Almost every one of the fingerprint sensors in laptops are not supported by Linux due to proprietary protocols. Never managed to get stuff used by Dell or HP with Linux.
But the Grow R503 can be used over uart, what can be connected to usb with some minor additional parts.