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sho_hn

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graydon2.dreamwidth.org
2 points·by sho_hn·3 mesi fa·0 comments

FreeCAD v1.1

blog.freecad.org
340 points·by sho_hn·4 mesi fa·108 comments

Experimental: Add xx-zones protocol for window positioning in zones

gitlab.freedesktop.org
5 points·by sho_hn·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Rust: Proof of Concept, Not Replacement

files.neoon.com
12 points·by sho_hn·7 mesi fa·11 comments

comments

sho_hn
·16 giorni fa·discuss
And Tomb Raider

https://eikehein.com/stuff/sabatu

Fan remake of the levels to avoid asset copy, but it's a downstream of the original engine (and loads the original level files just fine), so the real game.
sho_hn
·mese scorso·discuss
Note there is also a far simpler one: You can right-click the window on the taskbar and click Keep Above. This works for any window.
sho_hn
·mese scorso·discuss
From what I've seen in the blog post, this is underselling it a bit. They did improve on the color mixing model, and they're launching filaments to match to make it an end-to-end product.

No this isn't rocket science, and there's definitely a vibrant FOSS community actually pioneering this and that is probably the best place to be on the true frontier, but there is productization effort here. Considering people always advocate for Bambu for "making it easy to buy", Prusa also deserves credit when they try. They certainly get knocked when they don't.

As someone deeply embedded into the FOSS community myself, it's sometimes really annoying when we sabotage the better players. It only helps the worse ones.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Right, because the US and Chinese governments don't do/encourage any strategic investments into critical technologies.

Somehow people are only upset when Europeans dare to do the same.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Personally, I don't attend them since I figured out I can set up agents to performatively engage in AI-related discussion and events for me, freeing up tons of my time thanks to automation.

Truly: Nothing better than AI tools to brave the challenges and requirements of modern life. "Claude, ride the hype train" is the decisive prompt you need.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> At Tesla he had a way lower profile.

?

He was literally rolled out in front of camera as Tesla's AI prodigy at multiple streamed events designed to appeal to techy consumers and dev recruitment. He's definitely been one of AI's public personas for a long time now, and his employers have regularly aided/directed/utilized him accordingly.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I occasionally port software I make to MacOS, while mainly being a Linux user, and I settled on a base model, 8 GB M2 Mac Mini for this as well. If it's zippy there, it'll be zippy on the larger models.

On the PC/Linux side I keep an old thermally-constrained i5 Sony Vaio ultrabook with a lowly 4 GB from 2015 around for the same reason.

The main dev box is a Ryzen 9950X3D/128 GB monster, so it's a bit of a difference :)
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I've done zero debugging on my Prusa and it's been pretty much fire and forget. I had one spaghetti print failure in years on it, and it was my own fault for disabling supports and the print falling over :)

Automatic filament changes would be nice for sure, I look forward to upgrading to one of their new INDX models.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> They’re the only competent and reliable printer that isn’t a project car in itself

Prusa.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> Also: what do you mean "older people"? I ain't that old yet! Shakes fist at cloud

I'm 40. I have a kid. RHCP are literal Dad Rock now, accept and live it!
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Same, or worse. Having lived in Europe and Korea I can tell you numerous Queen songs have instant recognizability the world over, but I would say RHCP are a household name mostly in the US, except maybe some older people recognizing Californication as a distinctly 90s happening.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> I was almost just like you I got some recommendations from HN, all of them were for Bambu.

Bambu has spent a ton of dough on paid advertising via YouTube shills (it is absolutely rampant in that scene - I like the channel Maker's Muse as a notable exception, who also has some funny videos up where he reads emails from various vendors trying to bribe or intimidate him in various ways), and many in the HN crows were happy to parrot their talking points to justify their purchases. A winning marketing strategy.

To this day you end up encountering a lot of people who are under the impression Bambu printers somehow made 3D printing accessible or are the only ticket to a problem-free experience. And you know, the product might do that, the problem is the message that they're the only game in town, which has never been true and which they largely achieved on the back of work already done by others for them in software, designs and ecosystem development.

To contrast this: You often hear this about Apple, that they didn't necessarily invent the stuff, but they did the last-mile integration really well. It's incomparable. Apple did far more work on their products than Bambu ever did.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Not to sound hipster about it, but if it's done in this way I find it charming. I also had to piece it together, which took me on a little virtual travel tour, and had me wonder about what Richmond Hill means to the locals. Rather fitting in context, too.

The "everyone on the internet is American" stuff in e.g. politics or job market convos is a lot more grating.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
This is lovely. I'd love it if this or the Framework Pro also had OLED options, though.

My aging Thinkpad P1 (1st Gen) has a great LCD, but it's also the last non-OLED screen in my life, and I don't think I can buy another laptop without it. In fact it would be a purchase decision driver/upgrade incentive for me. This and longer battery life.

Even though I build lots of C++ code, I still don't think I need more than the Xeon in the P1, horse-power wise.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I think in reality it will look/feel a fair bit different due to the ceramic-coated material.

Asus has similar materials in recent models I believe; I rather like it.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I have a Displate of a decapped 555 hanging near my EE workbench:

https://displate.com/displate/2002057
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Tindie is great for this type of stuff, if OP needs a platform. Though my experience is only as a buyer.

That said, if you have a 3D printer these days the process of ordering a board with full PCBA from PCBWay/JLCPCB/Aisler and printing the case yourself is pretty easy.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Excellent hack, lovely write up. Learned about Embassy, which I didn't know yet. Thank you!
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Right, I also hear that sentiment pretty often. I don't regret having a software career and am very glad for my 25 years of C++ and many other things. I wouldn't want to be without that, and it probably did and does pay better.

However, it's pretty nice that these days I can also swing a semi-decent PCB, know my way around scopes and logic analyzers quite well, CAD something up for DFM in a number of processes from thermoplastics to machining, taught myself a fair bit of structural engineering, set up a FEM analysis correctly, etc. If only because it lets me bridge worlds and tie software and hardware together more effectively in the projects I'm in.

I cannot do any of these things as well as a seasoned veteran, but it has given me a broader appreciation of engineering overall and the commonalities between it all, to the point where I can also muster up leadership in engineering orgs more broadly and am not as hurt over the prospect that my pure programming skills might get devalued or diluted, or change.

For example, software engineers generally scoff at the perceived crustyness and lack of agility in classical mechanical engineering processes, but on the other hand mechanical engineering is far more experienced at defense-in-depth type approaches, dealing in components that have a failure rate to them and designing with error bars and safety factors, and I find some of that mindset has transferred quite naturally to engineering with our unreliable LLM friends at scale the past two years.

It takes a lot of the sting out if listening to Phish isn't your only move. Well, maybe not a lot, but at least it doesn't get so existential. Don't be a Programmer, be an Engineer. It's a lot easier to feel useful during a time of much doubt.
sho_hn
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Pros and cons. Some of the people who were lucky to enjoy those 30 years are also emotionally being hit the hardest right now, and if life threw a few curveballs at you along the way you don't necesarily have attained the sort of stability where you don't have to worry, either. Plus ageism can make it even harder to pivot.

I have programmer friends in their 40s to 60s who are seriously depressed currently (and 20 year olds worried for theirnl future perspectives, of course). Mental health is not just a young person's game.

I strangely feel quite lucky that I got more and more into electronics and hardware over time as I moved from web and desktop more and more into embedded/consumer electronics and companies who also employ mechanical and EE engineers. When I was younger I used to dumbly worry this meant giving something up (the purity of software approaches, etc.), but instead it made me consider myself an Engineer with a capital E and strive to learn the engineering method more generally, and learn so many other fields of the trade. It turns out this is a much more resilient identity than just Programmer and I recommend that approach.