Yep it was in the dryer at 55C after the first print for several hours.
Aka csm10495 on kbin.social
Yep it was in the dryer at 55C after the first print for several hours.
Weird as heck but without any cooling it printed fully just fine. Thanks for the advice!
Honestly not very different timing: maybe 25 minutes instead of 20 to be failing.
Trying more than 1 is an interesting idea. Too bad I don’t need more than 1 lol. Maybe I’ll print a benchy elsewhere on the plate. Though why wouldn’t more cooling help offset similarly?
This is an interesting thought. I wonder if the support tree is leading to more seams leading to issues. I’ll try it tomorrow with a different support structure that would change the seams.
I might be misunderstanding the licenses so correct me if wrong.
Can companies use GPL code internally without release as long as the thing written with it doesn’t get directly released to the public?
… or does GPL pollute everything even if used internally for commercial purposes?
+1. Lots of people are also likely to not have any idea about the situation and just think their PC crashes or acts up more. More of these issues can pop up over time.
A recall forces them to notify customers of the issue so the customer can act on it.
If the product has issues it should be legally required to either have a warranty extension, recall, or both. Heck they shouldn’t be selling more units until it’s figured out and patched.
It’s absurd to say: “it might have problems but we’ll keep selling it as is”.
We have safety recalls. There should be product degregation recalls.
Unless your lists are 1000s of items long, just use text files in a folder.
Could even go fancy and use markdown.
Recommend cloudflare for DNS. I use it for DDNS via API and it works great.
You also basically pay the wholesale rate without markup for the domain.
It’s exciting, but man there are lots of assumptions in native python built around the gil.
I’ve seen lists, etc. modified by threads assuming the gil locks for them. Testing this e2e for any production deployment can be a bit of a nightmare.
+1 to NPM. Works really easily for certs and auto renewal.
I’m perfectly fine with competition. This is the world. I’d buy a cheap Chinese car that passed regulations for driving in my country.
Trying to tariff instead of competing is just delaying the inevitable.
Sometimes I wonder: for a PC sitting behind a consumer router with no extra ports forwarded: How important are OS updates?
I mean if everything works for you on this version, why rock the boat? The idea is supposed to be security, fixes, and new features. We can throw out new features and fixes if you’re happy with everything as is.
Security is very buzzy and kind of vague to this type of user, but they also probably don’t tread far off from popular (likely … hopefully … safe) websites.
So hmm, if not accessing unsafe websites, and hidden behind a router NAT, and with physical safety of home, I wonder if the benefit of rocking the boat (and getting more ads and crap) is worth it.
Like definitely risks are there for any internet connected device but weighing it would be interesting. Someone in infosec should do a real analysis of this situation.
S m r t
I’ll cast a vote for checking the local Facebook marketplace or craigslist for a deal on a good laser printer.
My username has a space and a newline in it.
Random things break at random times.
Exactly the same boat. But man Cloudflare is better in every way. Having an API to update/fetch records for a zone does wonders.
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The answers here are all well and good, but show how using Linux isn’t as user friendly. Regular folks could care less about what filesystem they have. Heck even having a specific window manager vs another can seem farfetched.
I’ve always wanted to meet that 1 out of the 10 who don’t. Probably would be interesting to have a beer with.