Point of clarification: DAC is copper, AOC is fiber.
A lot of 10G equipment will support 5G/2.5G SFPs as well, so it can still be beneficial to go 10G on the core equipment.
Point of clarification: DAC is copper, AOC is fiber.
A lot of 10G equipment will support 5G/2.5G SFPs as well, so it can still be beneficial to go 10G on the core equipment.
I think the usual recommendation these days is get the highest rated corexy in your price range.
I’ve heard mixed reviews about Bambu AMS; seems cool enough, not quite the same as a true dual extruder, has some quirks and annoyances.
There’s Finamp, a music client for Jellyfin with offline playback. I’ve not used it personally yet, but with Spotify ratcheting up prices again I’m in the process of switching to self-hosting my music library. When that’s up and running it’s at the top of my list for Android clients.
You can make helmets very easily using a vac table and a 3d printed bust that’s the same size as your head
I’m definitely going to try this. All this time I’ve just been sticking my head in the vac table.
I don’t disagree, was just trying to shed light on the “don’t ask me why” part.
I dipped my toe into Solvespace for a couple of projects and it’s not bad. As with anything it takes some getting used to, and there are things that it does better than freecad (and vice versa).
This is not the same as the orange sheep “Partdesign_Clone” command found in the Part Design workbench. Don’t ask me why they use the same icon.
They’re the same icon because they’re both cloning operations — and I’m sure we’re all familiar with the story of Dolly the sheep, the first cloned animal.
They’re blue and orange because those are the freecad colors for sketch and part respectively.
The multi color is neat but that print quality… woof
and this is coming from someone who daily drives an ANET
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Here’s the only thing you need to know: radio is black magic.