flynnguy

joined 2 years ago
[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 3 points 1 day ago

Pretty much all the functional models I use are free. I get them from https://www.printables.com/ https://makerworld.com/ https://www.thingiverse.com/ https://thangs.com/ or I design them myself. Back when I was on Mac I would use Fusion but lately I've been 100% Linux so I've been using FreeCAD and it's way better since v1.0.

As far as paid models, it's mostly been things from https://www.myminifactory.com/ and generally sculpts because I want to support authors. Sometimes it's through patreon but they usually send myminifactory links to redeem.

But yeah, get yourself a pair of calipers and learn a CAD program.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 3 points 3 days ago

In the northeast US, we have both advent wreaths and advent calendars. The "wreath" we had growing up was metal but made to look like a wreath. (Probably because a wreath is a fire hazard)

I don't see a lot of wreath's anymore but advent calendars are still popular.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 2 points 1 week ago

Linux (Debian) with neovim. Telescope and Treesitter and the big plugins I use but I use a bunch of other smaller ones as well.

At my last job I did a bunch of Rust, this job I do mostly Go.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 6 points 1 week ago

Nope, software dev here.... work gave me a budget, told me to pick a computer and I put Linux on it. My Boss (the VP of Engineering) also runs Linux. We're a small company and some people do run Windows but we have google workspace so there hasn't been anything I've needed windows for.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 1 points 1 week ago

I've been down this rabbit hole and have some thoughts. Personally I've been trying to stick to Linux which makes things harder but since you have Mac and/or Windows, you have more options.

First, my main app I use (and why my laptop is still dual boot) is Fusion 360. I have a hobbyist license so it's free with some limitation that don't really matter. It doesn't work great on linux (I've gotten it to run with WINE but it seems to crash and not run great) so I've been looking at alternatives. However, it works great and will do pretty much whatever you want. Also works well with CNC if you want to branch out into that.

Lately I've started looking at https://www.onshape.com/en/ as it's all browser based. The free version means nothing is private but because it's browser based, it works with Linux. I've just played around with it once but it looks promising.

I really want to like FreeCAD but it's been confusing to me when I've tried to use it in the past. I think I just need to sit down and watch a view videos and read the docs to learn it. I've heard good things about it after it hit 1.0 so maybe I need to revisit it. I feel like this will be best to learn long term.

https://openscad.org/ isn't your standard CAD program but it can be really powerful. I've used it a few times but you need to think of your models programmatically and I've found this to be difficult for some applications. It's really cool though and worth checking out.

I've found TinkerCAD to be ok for simple things but it seems a bit simplistic for the things I've been trying to do.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 1 points 1 week ago

I almost exclusively use PLA and I've had no trouble but all my stuff is indoors. I've heard that it doesn't do as well in the elements so for anything outside, I'l probably look at using petg which from what I've read, holds up pretty well outside.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 1 points 1 week ago

I have an ender 5 which I've had to do all sorts of things to. I've also had terrible luck getting z-probes to work with it. They'll work for a while and then just die on me...

A while ago I backed the Phrozen Arco on Kickstarter. It was a mess of a compaign but I eventually got the printer (Over a year and a half late). However it's just worked and makes nicer prints than my ender 5. I love it so much. My makerspace has a Bambu which seems to have the same results. I love just printing something and having it work and not having to fuck with the printer. It's been so nice.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 2 points 1 week ago

I've tried it a few different ways and the best outcome I've had was using some tubing, like this one: https://youtu.be/yuZ0DA8w9XI

I don't always do it but when I do, I do it this way from now on. The tube makes sure the filament stays aligned, I also cut the two ends at a 45 and try and join them up inside the tube. Usually I'll save the ends and then do a few rolls at once, can usually get another few prints out of it.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 9 points 1 week ago

One of the many reasons I canceled my prime subscription is a lot of stuff was not coming in 2 days.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 2 points 1 month ago

Shame on these Democrats but does this mean they can release the Epstein files now?

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 2 points 1 month ago

I'd imagine a lot of private jets do fly IFR though which does involve ATC. So even if they fly out of a non towered airport, they probably file their IFR plan with a towered airport and start talking to them once in the air.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 16 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Piff the Magic Dragon also had his dog Mr. Piffles cloned before he passed. From what I understand, he tried finding another dog but they never really fit in his act the same way so as Mr. Piffles started to get older, he cloned him and now has Mr. Piffles 2.0.

https://www.tmz.com/2024/11/13/piff-the-magic-dragon-cloned-mr-piffles-chihuahua-dog-magician/

It's not cheap but I don't think Tom Brady cares about how much it costs.

 

So I was in the market for a new computer. Previously I used a 2015 MacBook Pro and liked the Mac experience, I could run pretty much whatever software I wanted but I still had a terminal. However looking at the latest Mac's, everything is soldered, no way to upgrade anything. This was not something I wanted to support so I started looking at my options....

I don't love Windows but if I go from non-mac hardware, my options become Linux or Windows. I have a windows 11 desktop that I use mostly for gaming but for my daily driver, I didn't want a Windows machine. That left Linux.... what could I run?

I realize this isn't for everyone but I started looking at my options. The first piece of software I use that I was looking to replace was Capture One (Photography software). I started looking around and found darktable which so far seems to have all I need. It was a little adjustment from Capture One but not a lot. It runs on Windows/Mac/Linux so you can certainly try it out before you make the switch.

Then I use Alfred App as my quick launcher on my Mac. On Linux, I found Albert which seems to have what I'm looking for. I like that I can write plugins in Python but it's still pretty fast because it's mostly written in c++. It's not perfect but it'll do for now.

For 3d printing, most of the slicing software runs natively on Linux/Mac/Windows so that was an easy decision. The biggest downside was that I use Fusion 360 which does not have a Linux port. Jumping forward, I did try running it in Wine and it mostly works but not really 100% so right now I dual boot solely for this piece of software.

I already switched to Inkscape for vector graphics so that was easy since there is already a Linux version. I don't do a lot of word processing, spreadsheets and/or presentations but when I do, google docs has been good enough and there's LibreOffice if I really want to go local. Most other misc software I use is generally Open Source and runs on Linux as an option.

Since I already decided I would dual boot, I pulled the plug on a Framework 16. I really liked the modularity, the fact that it worked under Linux and really, everything about the company.

Installation was fairly straight forward once I sorted the Windows/Linux dual boot situation. You need to do it in the correct order or Windows complains. (I used 2x1TB NVMe drives) I went with OpenSuse tumbleweed mostly because debian is on the older side (great for servers, not great for desktops), ubuntu is dead to me after apt install firefox installs a snap and not a deb, fuck snaps. OpenSuse seemed like a good balance of latest but with mostly stability. I didn't want to go Arch or Gentoo because I just don't have time for that now.

So once everything is setup, I install Albert, Firefox, DarkTable, Inkscape, 3d Slicers, and Steam. In steam, I installed the handful of Linux native games but was a little disappointed in the number. Then I was talking with my son about Proton and decided to look into it a bit more. HOLY SHIT, IT'S JUST A FLAG IN STEAM!!!! Basically it's Settings->Properties->Compatability.... then toggle "Force the use of a specific Steam Play compatibility tool." Then I was just able to install Windows games under Linux. They run just like any other Steam game. There's a website that lists compatibility: https://www.protondb.com/ but so far everything I've tried to run works fine. So if you run Linux and Game at all, check this out.

So basically, now I've been using Linux as my daily driver (except for work) and the only thing I've had to boot into Windows for is Fusion 360.... Maybe I should really take a look at FreeCAD but for now, Fusion is too easy for me to reach for.

tl;dr: I think 2025 is the year of the Linux Desktop (well, Laptop, main driver) for me.

 

I'm making a box to store a pizza. The box itself is pretty straight forward, cherry wood, box joints and basically a groove in the bottom with a piece of plywood (cherry plywood) to act as the bottom. I'm pretty happy with how the bottom went together but for the top I'm having an issue....

So for the top I have a 3/8ths piece of roughly 10x10 with basically a dado around the edge so it insets slightly into the box. The problem I'm having is that when a pizza goes in, it bows a bit. I'm guessing it's the steam from the pizza but so far I've been able to put something heavy on it and it comes out but I want to prevent it in the future.

I'm thinking a couple strips on the underside (basically across to U that forms) might help (with some glue and a couple of screws). I've also "sealed" it with a food grade oil but I'm looking for thoughts if this will or won't help and any possible alternatives.

4
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by flynnguy@programming.dev to c/tengwar@lemmy.sdf.org
 

Not mine but I found it really useful...

 

So a friend of mine recommended Obsidian ages ago and I looked at it but thought I was happy using Joplin (another text-based note tool) which I still think is a great app. Took a brief look at it and thought it was just too complicated...

Then recently, I went down a youtube rabbit hole watching videos of how people use Obsidian... OMG 🤯

Now I have 2x Vaults, one for work and one personal. Dataview, templater, quickadd, periodic notes have just changed everything. Now I have documents for each person at work with their basic info and then when I make a meeting, I can just tag them which then updates a dataview table that shows what meetings I've been in with them.

Tasks allows me to just create a bunch of todos in random notes and then I can create a table to show all my undone tasks.

I mean, why did I wait so long? I've been using it for about 10 days now and it's been such a game changer. Sorry Joplin.

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