Heat map images were analyzed using canonical correlation (Rc) to determine the relationship between the two groups; dispersion testing to decipher spatial uniformity within the images; the Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) to characterize the nature of image patterns differences; and, the Breslow–Day Test to specify pattern locations within images.
This is an overlay of every participant. So if 100 women clicked in the same 10 places, for instance, they would be red. While places 50 women clicked would be yellow.
Also, even if this was eye tracking of one person, it could still make sense. Red != 100%. Red is the place where the most time was spent looking. So of 1s was spent on all the dots, and everywhere else was less than 1s, then red. Comparing it to the male chart is what makes it seem off, but the comparison of color doesn't matter, it's the math.
This would be impossible. Orca is rhe most widely used, and many printers don't ship woth a slicer. Since Orca is FOSS, and there is no sale, there is no way to regulate that.
Firmware on the other hand, is different. The catch is just about every printer can have Klipper installed on it (most just have a modified Klipper already), which, means the law is pointless since it is also FOSS.
I see a lot of people responded with a true clean slate, but really, a fork is a clean slate.
It's not like Graphene, or Lineage, or any others would stop working. More maintainers would be needed for security issues, but way less than to get (non-Android) Linux phones up to speed.
Many graphene users, myself included, use all FOSS software from outside Google's store.
It is almost always better to give money to your local food bank than to someone on the side of the road.
They buy in bulk, making the money go farther. Also, while casualties from panhandling are low, motor vehicle accidents are still common enough.
And yes, some people can't make it to the food bank, but that's a rarity. It's done because they can get more that way than at a food bank. Unfortunately food banks can't do the same (legal reasons).
It's a compressor, which is probably the problem. I'm using a DH11 on ESPHome, so am pretty confident of the accuracy, it's down in the bottom center of the cabinet. (I designed these https://nowsci.com/only-sensor)
Assuming I can get it working, not really. Your described method would be good for occasional prints, but terrible for higher volumes. Keeping an area at a target humidity (especially a small one) is much more efficient than a constantly running device.
Hmm had not considered this, but I doubt that's having an impact on minimum humidity (currently), as that feels like it would impact when the system isn't running?
Ahh, that's more clear then, sorry!
https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/vio.2023.0027
Basically:
@sem@piefed.blahaj.zone