ExtremeDullard

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) (2 children)

What a terrible country.
All three of them.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) (2 children)

Well, I'm an avid cyclist and left the US 25 years ago, and if that's really the kind of behemoth that roams the streets in the US today, I'm glad I did.

[–] [email protected] 40 points 6 hours ago (3 children)

He should join one of the tankie Lemmy instances for a real choice treatment. That would be fun for to watch for 5 minutes

[–] [email protected] 17 points 6 hours ago (5 children)

I own one of these. I have zero issues replacing the cells 😃

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) (8 children)

I'm pretty sure the scales are different. Look at the door handles: regardless of the size of the vehicle, anything that interact with human beings should be roughly the same scale and the door handles just aren't.

Not to say that American trucks aren't ridiculously oversized of course, but that photo looks doctored to me.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 hours ago

The entire business model of all the cheap Chinese online retailers relies on looking the other way when it comes to labor protection and product safety standards. They would all go under in a New York minute if they had to make halfway decent products without wage slaves.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 hours ago

I don't find it convenient at all personally. I haven't done anything substantial in the console for at least 2 decades, so I never have any reason to log into the console other than to rescue a machine. Therefore, if the only thing I need the console for is to type "sway", and then having to log out twice, I'd much rather have a DM.

But to each his own 😃

 

If you're new to Wayland as I am, you haven't failed to be frustrated by the greeter / Sway not sourcing any of the usual X or profile configuration files. In i3, you export your variables in .profile and they're set everywhere for the whole session. Not so in Sway.

That means if you have a custom PATH or some exported variable you would like to define session-wide - setting QT_QPA_PLATFORMTHEME so all QT apps use the correct theme in Gnome for instance - you can't. Not the usual way anyway.

Those variables are set if you run a terminal with the shell in login mode, if they're defined in /etc/profile or .profile, but not if you run the program directly in Sway, such as wofi / rofi for example, or any program that needs an environment variable that isn't set.

Here's how to set environment variables for the entire session in Sway:

  • Choose a greeter that understands systemd's environment.d. Unfortunately, there aren't very many. GDM and Plasma are the only two that I know of that do.

  • Define your environment variables in ~/.config/environment.d/envvars.conf. You can define them the usual way like in profile, including extending variables like $PATH, e.g.:

    QT_QPA_PLATFORMTHEME=qt5ct
    PATH=$PATH:/usr/games:~/scripts
    
  • Either reboot for the changes to take effect, or run systemctl --user daemon-reload to get systemd to parse your file again, then log out and back in as with Xorg.

Unfortunately, simply logging out and back in without informing systemd of your changes isn't enough - which is why you need to reboot if you don't do the daemon-reload command.

That's it!

Not too obvious, and not great. But in fairness, it's no more confusing than the mess of shell and X configuration files that existed before systemd and Wayland. It's just that systemd and Wayland are an entirely different complete trainwreck that takes getting used to 😃

[–] [email protected] 7 points 13 hours ago

Yeah, it's like crypto: you can tell it's a scam when certain people and organizations start doing it.

Klarna getting onboard something scammy shouldn't surprise anybody.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

Why are we so compliant?

It's the proverbial frog boiled slowly enough that it doesn't realize the water is warming up.

Think about it: if you're old enough, do you remember the massive outrage over Nixon's Watergate nonsense or Clinton's BJ? Compare this to today where the president is grifting millions of dollars every day, the INS is turning into the Gestapo, suspension of habeas rights, violating the Posse Comitatus Act, trampling the constition right and left with his goons everyday, and nobody bats an eyelid no more.

Not to mention, 77,284,118 simpletons actively voted for this shit. It's not an accident.

 

This is Sway running on my ARM64 laptop. It took some effort to get everything going just right in Wayland but now that it\s all setup, I really like it.

The one thing I miss in Sway / Waybar is the ability to bind mouse and scroll events to commands when they happen in the empty parts of the bar like in i3 / i3blocks. If anybody knows how to achieve that, I'd be extremely grateful!

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago

I lived in Utah. I'm not surprised.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 day ago

In Russia, falling off windows is called "Putin syndrome". In Canada, I guess it's called " Poutine syndrome".

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago

Mozilla has been consistently making the wrong decisions for decades. This is just another one. Calm down, the outrage will go away like it always does.

 

The latest PrusaSlicer versions require OpenGL 3.2 and my machine only supports OpenGL 3.1.

Anybody knows if other slicers can generate gcode or bgcode files for Prusa printers? If so, which would you recommend?

135
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

See original problem here

So I played with all kinds of settings in PrusaSlicer. Nothing changed anything.

The only things that did improve the outcome some was:

  • Forcing the letters to be printed first: then the letters are smooshed and bleed into the background instead of the other way round, which arguably looks better / more legible. Nothing to write home about though.

  • Dropping the first layer's height to 0.1mm (the other layers are 0.2mm high): that improves the letters a bit.

  • Dropping the first layer's height to 0.05mm: because the first layer is so thin, it becomes kind of translucent and the wider white letter beneath it sort of show through. The net result is that it drops a kind of gaussian blur onto the lettering, which actually improves them - especially at a distance.

Other than that, there's just nothing for it. And half of the suggestions I got concern other slicers, and I couldn't find them or equivalents in PrusaSlicer. Oh well...

I guess that's as good as it's gonna get.

 

I'm printing those little cable pull tabs on our Prusa XL printer. In the models, I added markings to identify the type of cable, printed directly into the tabs with a different color PLA loaded on head #2.

The problem I have, as you can see, is that the white letters are "overrun" by the back surroundings.

I have to print those parts face down: when the first layer is laid down onto the bed, the black surrounding is printed first with head #1, leaving empty space for the symbols, then head #2 comes in and fill in the spaces after the head change:

The problem apparently is that the black material gets "smooshed out" on the bed and partly fills in the void, and then the white PLA doesn't have enough space to make nice, sharp letters.

It wouldn't be a big problem with larger letters: they would just look like they have fuzzy edges. But those letters are 3.5mm in height and only two 0.4mm-wide lines at the most, so it's basically all fuzziness.

It doesn't happen when I print face up. But then I have to have support for the tabs' walls, and since I print those things by the hundreds, I'm really not keep on having to remove support on hundreds of tiny parts. So it's not an option.

I tried printing slower but it doesn't change much of anything. Not to mention, again, I have to print those things as fast as possible to print as many as possible overnight.

And of course I can't increase the size of the letters: they're as big as the tabs' size will allow.

The letters are readable enough, but they don't really look great. Is there any trick to reduce or eliminate this? I was thinking of trying to print the white first with head #2, then the black with head #1, but I can't find an option in Prusa Slicer to invert the order in which the heads are used.

 

I'm printing those little cable pull tabs on our Prusa XL printer. In the models, I added markings to identify the type of cable, printed directly into the tabs with a different color PLA loaded on head #2.

The problem I have, as you can see, is that the white letters are "overrun" by the back surroundings.

I have to print those parts face down: when the first layer is laid down onto the bed, the black surrounding is printed first with head #1, leaving empty space for the symbols, then head #2 comes in and fill in the spaces after the head change:

The problem apparently is that the black material gets "smooshed out" on the bed and partly fills in the void, and then the white PLA doesn't have enough space to make nice, sharp letters.

It wouldn't be a big problem with larger letters: they would just look like they have fuzzy edges. But those letters are 3.5mm in height and only two 0.4mm-wide lines at the most, so it's basically all fuzziness.

It doesn't happen when I print face up. But then I have to have support for the tabs' walls, and since I print those things by the hundreds, I'm really not keep on having to remove support on hundreds of tiny parts. So it's not an option.

I tried printing slower but it doesn't change much of anything. Not to mention, again, I have to print those things as fast as possible to print as many as possible overnight.

And of course I can't increase the size of the letters: they're as big as the tabs' size will allow.

The letters are readable enough, but they don't really look great. Is there any trick to reduce or eliminate this? I was thinking of trying to print the white first with head #2, then the black with head #1, but I can't find an option in Prusa Slicer to invert the order in which the heads are used.

 

Uh oh... Looks like Michael Wolff hit a nerve with the orange utan there.

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