nullroot

joined 11 months ago
[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 2 points 6 days ago

Well, good. I hope it stays that way and I'll be cautiously optimistic it's actually a good thing. Thank you for the information.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 28 points 1 week ago (13 children)

I can't see anything good coming from this

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Are these pictures written or drawn?

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I'm sorry but this reads like journalists are starving in Gaza

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

You're assuming crippling dependency and yes you are making a judgement, it's your whole reason why you're not giving money. Yes I know how addiction works I'm 6 years clean from hard drug use and was an addict for about an long.

Addiction is rarely the root cause of homelessness, it's a byproduct, and it's something people do to cope with their hard reality. If these people's society hadn't failed them they likely wouldn't be turning to hard drugs to numb the pain of their existence.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

This is just putting your own morals and conditions on generosity and also assuming you know what's best for the homeless person. Yes, I agree we need systemic change to address homelessness but that's not what this is about. I think we should give without judgement. You're not gonna give them the whole rehabilitation treatment and society has failed them, who are you to judge if the next fix is or isn't the best thing for them to cope, minimize their suffering, make it through a hard day or cold night?

This whole conversation wreaks of holier than thou.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

Lol yes it is. Most of the population would be mitigated suffering if you just gave them money. Literally money buys happiness until you're like a millionaire. Get off your high horse and treat these people like humans and not as something less than.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This is such a bad take. If it's so profitable why don't you quit your job and go beg for a living? Someone is asking for help and your response is to question their worthiness or intention?

Someone is asking for help. Help if you can. It's not easy to get out their and hold a sign belittling yourself and putting your fate in the hands of strangers. Have a little humanity.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 1 points 3 weeks ago

God dammit I just read record high over drugs and completely misinterpreted what this story is about. Time for me to go to bed.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

My qidi regularly prints between 0.2 and 0.4mm variation across the bed level and it prints very good.

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Try https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=eVP_Zj2Iaw0, it worked for me, but the site has a warning that YouTube started issuing captchas for videos breaking a lot of services

[–] nullroot@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

Hundred percent. It feels pretty fucking thought-crimey to vilify the people who use these services.

 

Hello 3d printer fans and makers. I currently have an a1 mini and have been putting it through its paces over the last several months. Ive probably used 5kg of filament and have maybe a few hundred hours of prints on it. I love the little machine, its a work horse. But it cannot print most engineering materials and Im looking to branch into more exotic prints and get myself a bigger build volume.

My first thought was getting the a1 with ams for multifilament printing and then I would have an ams I could use with either printer, but upon ruminating on the subject multifilament printing this way really seems to be such a gimmick and if I really want to do it there's always stop code and manual filament switching. Plus its another bed slinger with the only real change being the larger build volume.

So that brings me to the Qidi Q1 Pro. All the reviews really talk it up, I like that its built on klipper and an open ecosystem (-1 for Bambu), the hotend max temp, the heated champer, the larger build plate, and the price? All seems like a big win to me.

My current plan is buying the printer along with a filament dryer, I dont really want to get their drybox attachment, a smooth build plate, some CF something filament, and 0.6mm nozzle as accessories.

Do you all have any thoughts on polydryer, if the 3 x-plus might be something to consider if I really want a bigger build plate than what the Q1 pro offers, or if there might be another printer for me to consider in the $500-700 range. Also, any recommendations on filaments I might want to try with a heated chamber, 100C build plate, and 350C capable hot end? Im leaning towards something nylon and/or carbon fiber... maybe PA-CF? lol.

Anyways, any input is appreciated. Thanks!

 

Hello 3d printing community! I am looking to join the ranks and purchase my first 3d printer. Specifically I am looking at the a1 mini.

My use case is mostly functional, housing for electronics, hooks and jigs, that sort of thing, so I don't think I need the ams kit although the multicolor printing and support beams of different materials sounds nifty, I also hear bambu printers are really good with supports.

My biggest questions to the community are, is this a good choice? What filament should I start with? And I live in a dryer climate, is a filament dryer something I should definitely invest in, and if so what is a decent and decently cheap one you'd recommend?

Thank you for taking the time to read (and hopefully reply to) my post.

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