What cashiers? We have to check ourselves out.
tonyn
I go a step further and install uMatrix, and then only unblock the resources that are essential for a site to work right.
I just watched LPL pick a smart lock with no keyhole. He just had to shove a bit of wire in the drain hole at the bottom. 🤦♂️
So what happens if they do gay stuff in prison?
I use tinkercad to do most things, especially when it comes to combining models, adding some shapes or holes, etc. It's easy to use, you aren't inundated with features you don't need, and always exports an STL that your slicer can understand. I use blender for more complex things, but I know like 2% of what blender can do, so it's easy to get lost in there.
Whoa, elephants have ass teeth?
I love it! It looks like a robot with legs. You should put some googly eyes on the bucket 😁
I would definitely need the final say in any commands it decides to run on my system. But, this sounds like a fun game to play in a pretend shell that won't nuke my drive if it gets pissy, lol
I'll second JBL. I have two FLIP 5's and they are loud, have partyboost mode, or stereo mode, and last all day long.
Yes, took the rider course and the experienced rider course, and respected the machine. Having more power can actually make for a smoother and safer ride. No need for 9k RPMs to get moving. It's responsive in any gear, at any speed. It's a lot less twitchy, more predictable than smaller bikes.
I use Tinkercad for simple stuff, FreeCAD for complex parts, and Blender for anything requiring sculpting. As a 3d printing hobbyist I can't justify the price of commercial CAD software. I prefer open source when a good option is available. FreeCAD took a little getting used to, but it's got everything you might need to create a part or mechanism for printing. Tinkercad is great for real quick simple stuff, and for blending simple models together. Software is a tool, and you need a specific tool for each specific task. Blender is the best free 3d sculpting software I've found.