

I’ve been in one of those, we moved to samba first and to ubuntu later, in the end of the day we only really needed updates and centralized login storage. There were like 10 windows machines for accounting.


I’ve been in one of those, we moved to samba first and to ubuntu later, in the end of the day we only really needed updates and centralized login storage. There were like 10 windows machines for accounting.


I’ve found 100% infill weaker than something like 60%, it won’t break per se, it would delaminate. Also number of walls is really important you can dial down infill to 20-25% if you have 6 walls or more.


Fiber optics jumped 4 times in price locally.


FPV drones are anti-everything that moves drones.


I mean they look cool, but this doesn’t really seem useful? I mean in police operations they might see some use or extremely short and very well supplied missions.


No it’s a prefectly reasonable stance, but having wrong opinion or even thinking the wrong way is disallowed.


But it’s boring and won’t give you the feelingn of being right.
I think that it’s under very active development right now so that’s might be the source of the instability. IIRC there are alternative assembly workbenches that are more stable.


I have a big food container with heated bed for reptiles which heats up to 60 degrees celsius, it takes 4 x 1 kilogram spools or 2 x 3 kilogram spools, one 12 volt cooler and boxes with silikagel with indicators. All in all it took me less then $50 and silicagel can be reused after heating in the oven.
As in assembly workbench?
Maybe your brain just isn’t wired to use it(yet), my experience with blender and other 3d modeling software was like black magic, and cad software was at least transparent.


My experience with bambulab is limited to older generation models: a1, x1, p1 dunno if it still applies.
It literally snitches everything you print, requires online (even in lan mode it sometimes stops and won’t work untill it phoned home then it will work again).
Almost any modern printer is extremely beginner friendly. Recently I’ve gotten 4 Elegoo Centauri Carbons 1, and they offer essentially the same experience as bbl printers (I have no idea abut phone app - never used one), they are very simple to setup, require little knowledge to operate and maintain spare parts are available, printed for about 300 hours on each one without any problems and just a single failed print. But my experience might be warped due to years of accumulated knowledge about both printers and slicers and is limiting due not printing pla at all.
But it’s one of those really complex programs that require some knowledge of the problem field and familiarity with UI how can it be made intuitive? Never used fusion, but tinkercad isn’t intuitive or simple.
I had one or two crashes in the two years of frequent use (few times a week for multiple hours) on arch linux, lately I’ve been using weekly appimages and they crash a lot more.
I’ve never had professional experience with CAD software and tried both onshape and freecad at the same time just before fc1.0 release, onshape for some reason was like using iphone or something like that while freecad was just ok. There are frustrating limitations and some things are broken and require workarounds true.


Re-read three times until you find two countries in the thread.


Diffefent from which one? Do you think that there are only two cultures in the world? 🙃 I don’t use google, and don’t know how relevanf graffiti is to discussion about displays in toilets.


Japan is a paradise, don’t you watch anime?
That’s true up to a point especially with modern printers, but in really humid places you can see big difference.
Also people baby their printing plates, and models as well. For some applications it makes very little difference.