I have to admit that the last time I did it was with windows …vista?
Why isn’t it advisable?
I have to admit that the last time I did it was with windows …vista?
Why isn’t it advisable?
You don’t need a second drive to dual boot. Although some atomic distros don’t like to share.


Spud, who was recording on his Ray-Ban Meta smartglasses
…yeah.


this may be an article for a more targeted audience. Too bad we’re not talking about red dots, but green or orange.
I mean, this looks like a step towards that direction, no?


I actually giggled at this.


Can’t the car just back up half a meter then quickly go forward half a meter?


I don’t do any of those things, because my devices block them before they ever reach me.
If I don’t design them myself, I get them from Printables.com.
Students come to me with models from Makerworld, and those are, more often than not, terribly optimized for 3D printing.
Not to be confused with ReactJS.
There are ways around it, for sure, but let’s say it was enough to instill bad habits in me.


When you live in a country where upload speeds are abysmall even when download speeds are ok, you learn to heavily throttle torrent uploads lest you ruin the internet for your entire household.


Also, if you’re making raspberry pi enclosures as I think I read in the comments, there is this library that has pre-modeled rpis to use as a reference: https://github.com/nophead/NopSCADlib


It’s honestly pretty powerful, you can even import libraries from other users. A good example I’ve found is the board game inserts that user “js500” is uploading on Printables. He has his own library with things like rounded cubes, finger holes and whatnot, then uses that to create inserts for different games. Here’s an example: https://www.printables.com/model/1192543-white-castle-with-matcha-insert-organizer-also-fit (Make sure to also download the library file included)


Fair enough!


I wouldn’t recommend Blender for anything that needs to have accurate dimensions, as it is a pain to get things right, even with the “CAD” addon.
FreeCAD seems great, but the UI and UX are horrendous. It’s a steep learning curve.
If you have any coding experience, I recommend giving OpenSCAD a look, like mentioned in another comment. I believe most of the older Prusa printer parts were designed on it.


“Trickles down” sure implies Fedora here, especially when Bazzite is mentioned.
Are those scratches on the bed? My skin is crawling.


Aha! Gotcha.
You won’t be able to afford RAM and SSD though.