

I didn’t think of that - also for nvim you typically pull plugins from git repositories
I didn’t think of that - also for nvim you typically pull plugins from git repositories
I just didn’t plot anything anymore tbh. I originally wanted to make stencils for electro-etching but I realized that I don’t really have that much of use for it.
I did it with my ender 3, using a printed bracket to hold the knife. It’s a hassle to use and I barely use it because it’s such a pita. I managed to make a few nice cutouts though so it’s definitely possible. I just wouldn’t recommend it.
eh, back when the “exodus” was happening it felt like every second post is about defederation. Nowadays you don’t hear much about it anymore, but if you only looked back then I see how you could come to that conclusion.
Boost feels a lot like rif which I was using and which shutdown made me switch to lemmy.
It certainly depends on your hotend but I’m able to get a bag of 20 for <10€ for my trusty old ender 3 (actually 4.17€ on AliExpress)
can you not get 3rd party ones?
If you’re looking for a cheap good one, get those super cheap ones from AliExpress/etc. Imho these are soo much better than anything else you can get in the consumer space, and even some commercial ones because they are super responsive. The only downsides are that they’re relatively small so reading the display with a large bowl on top is a bit difficult and they’re probably not super accurate, especially with low loading. But that’s not really an issue for cooking. They take regular AAA batteries that last for ages and the thing costs like under 5€. I’ve had mine for like 8 yrs now and aside from a bit of liquid that got into the display it still works completely fine.
Here’s the type I’m talking about:
How else do you use your nutmeg?
the obsidian-git plugin. Auto commits and pulls/push every x minutes. Works great for me, I get full version control and works on all my platforms (Linux, Windows, Android). You just need to be careful with your .gitignore and add at least .obsidian/workspace.json to prevent conflicts.
Probably not suitable if you store larger files, but after a year of daily usage with tons of small images I’m still below 150 MB.
You are the reason we can’t have nice things.
Google Lens is also a thing for general usage, and there are plenty options for more specific tasks such as Merlin for birds.
Seed and… seed?
I think this is a perfect strategy - you can sell code, and if any of it contains issues/bugs/gaping security holes you can just blame your customer for not checking the AI output