Are you printing PETG?
Are you printing PETG?
Doesn’t help if there is housing available but it’s 3 hours from where my work is :/
Same I need to know if there is an actual reason for this picture.
Omg yes! This picture has gotten so much better now!
What’s going on with the brown things in the tubs?
Also can anyone explain what is happening in the experiment.
And this is an example of what being a “high functioning autistic person” is like XD
It appeals to the squirrel living in the back of your brain.
Wow now this is a battle!
Thanks for sharing
As someone with senior experience in cloud engineering here is my input, naming things is hard.
And God forbid you decide down the line you need a sub domain the terror of having service-b.service-a.com give me the chills.
But yeah 100% naming thing is difficult so you end up naming it after the software and using the group as the parent domain
Ooh that’s very cool, I must investigate :3
It’s a shame this doesn’t go further and make the knowledge open source.
If the hosts for this project ever stop then all the info contribution goes to waste :/
I know it would be impractical but i would like to see something like this powered by an open repo where for example all the guides and plant info was stored in a format like markdown docs.
Could use something simple like Docusaurus to power the front end and then have contributors use some sort of front end that wraps that git pull part so non coders could still add to it.
The beautiful thing is that plant data can be accessed without any compute.
The magic of the bad server is they have an R&D budget plus ops team so some waste while testing is covered, you tend to pay for mistakes on the good (home) server :P
Plus getting feedback from a good team beats a rubber duck XD
And then sometimes you use a work server to design the pattern for the home server.
As a South African currently abroad I have my popcorn at hand waiting for more drama to come.
Can you check the humidity levels in the room you have the printer?
I struggled finding reliable calibrations for my printer and materials until I realised a couple of things.