

Orca slicer has an App image available on their GitHub release page! You’re all set!
Orca slicer has an App image available on their GitHub release page! You’re all set!
So many come out of school with Matlab experience. I get them started with python. They brush me off. Then the license server goes down. Welcome to open source grasshopper! I should make a meme about this and put on my door…
I have to take a breath whenever I find an F77 file. Prepare for a lack of objects!
I put Bazzite on an Intel n100 box I’m using as an HTPC. Super easy install and it was ready to go and working just fine very quickly. Jellyfin works really well! It really is quite incredible how far things have come since my first install of Ubuntu 14.04. Atomic could really make some headway on making Linux easy for a typical user. Wine has come a LOOOONG way help keep compatibility too.
Way better than my Ubuntu desktop. The only thing hold me back on putting an atomic distro on my desktop is not familiar with how things like Python venvs would work for development. That and I use a global hotkey program for Team speak since they haven’t updated to handle Wayland global keys.
I am annoyed by the weird UX differences between Kodi and Jellyfin. I really want this to be a thing. I’ve got an N100 box running libreelec right now. I really want Bigscreen to work on x86. Just need to have patience.
Here I am still using requirements.txt and the built in venv. Sure poetry looks cool. I just don’t have it everywhere. Now I just have to wait 5 years before I can reliably use a pylock.toml. Progress!
Woah there! This is GNOME. You don’t get choices.
I wrote my own fillet function in openscad. It was a fun adventure to work out the geometry. Next time I’ll use some else’s function.
You can run both. There might be issues with the metadata going back and forth. Not sure. Haven’t done it myself. There are definitely people doing this out there.
Should have picked a suit that blended in with the background like James Comey.
That’s the spot all the recent history presidents have sat at for cabinet meetings. Here’s one from 1976. https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/ford-administration-cabinet-meeting-minutes
Swiftfin works great. Infuse is also an option. Bulk editing is probably on the feature request list. (yep sure is https://features.jellyfin.org/posts/144/editing-metadata-for-multiple-items-at-once) Pull requests are welcome. There is also the JEMM application for metadata edition. Not sure if it still works with the current API.
I keep a Win10 VM kicking for things like this. Sure I could probably do it with Wine, but sometimes I just take the easy route.
There are some plug-ins for Calibre that might be able to help you.
It’s not a great deal for the libraries. They ebooks can come with a limited number of checkouts and cost far more.
I switched to Kobo and have been very happy so far. I was able to download my books from Amazon and mumble and then I was able to read them on my Kobo device and store them in my Calibre library.
I was at an event years ago and had the chance to talk with one of the engineers that worked on the Model X. I mentioned the QA and reliability issues with the falcon doors. He took offense to me bringing up that there were issues with the car. Dude. You’re not a good engineer if you look at the product and think it’s perfect. There will ALWAYS be something more to improve upon. If you take feedback poorly, you are refusing the help of others to improve.
Like mDNS?
Add on this change in policy in Taiwan and the value of the island for latest generation chip production changes too. https://wccftech.com/tsmc-might-have-secured-taiwans-approval-to-make-advanced-2nm-chips-in-us/
It’s poor design on Nvidias part. There is no load balancing.
What’s he going to do? Drop commits? /s