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3 yr. ago

  • TL;DR: Chains are better in tough conditions like mud and are easier to repair. Belts are great outside of these conditions.

  • First staining and then applying a lacquer is a great idea. Will the lacquer not fill the cuts and make them less visible? Or does it keep a depth effect?

    Anything in particular to look for in the lacquer? I'd prefer a natural look to fit with the raw wood in the rest of the piece. However, it sits on a glass bowl so I suppose glossy could have its charm on that too.

  • Good idea! Also like the_v said, it could help to contrast the shapes in the cut.

    I thought of using a limited tint so it would blend with the other untreated wood nearby, but a darker color could make the shapes stronger. It also tends to make the wood's internal structure stand out more.

  • It won't be on the soil, it will become the lid. The terrarium will be sealed for water so the bottom will become a paraffin wax which should keep the moisture out. The top will gradually collect dust though and the thin lid ideally shouldn't bend too much.

    Tung oil could be nice.

    I'm afraid varnish will fill the voids too much and make the tiny cuts fade.

  • Beginner Woodworking @lemmy.ml

    How treat wood with a detailed CNC cut against moisture?

  • I believe the parent post is nicely sketching out what a "best" move is. I have seen no better approach myself. At the same time I see what you see. The best approach isn't all that great. If you're lucky and find the right people it could work. There's a lot of luck involved there.

    That's why I do think there should be some regulations indicating what is tolerated. It seems to me parent poster may agree (and thus also woth your take).

    Since GDPR you can tell the school you don't want pictures on platforms you disagree with. You may miss out on seeing the photo's, you might come across as crazy, but you can (and you should). We were given a choice at the cost of extra paperwork and some limitations.

    Even without the addiction problem of these platforms we should nurture and find a good society around us. It's a valid take to try and find likeminded people.

    I don't think that's the end of it. Given the state we're in, the network effect, and the fragile ego of developing kids, I suppose we need a stronger push.

    AI enforced age verification or logins which allow you to be followed anywhere is not the solution in my current opinion, it's a different problem. The problems are the addictive and steering nature of the platforms which seems to be hard to describe in a clear way legally.

    I wonder how "these platforms" should be defined and what minimum set of limitations would give us and the children the necessary breathing space.

  • I'll reply to this random one with that statement. There's no winning move as a parent.

    Problem is being locked out. If your kid is the only one not on social media and all other kids are, your kid will be socially left out.

    All kids are on a chat platform you don't support. What do you? Disallow it and give them a social handicap that might scar them, or allow it and take the risk?

    The same goes for allowing images on other platforms. Since GDPR schools seem to care. Yet if it's a recording that will be put on social media you can explain your 4 year old why they weren't allowed to participate... It sucks.

    I don't know what the right way forward is. I don't think this is it. Something is needed though. We should at least signal what we find acceptable as a society. Bog stupid rules which are trivial to circumvent might be good enough, or perhaps some add campaigns like we did with smoking (hehe, if it's for something we support then adds are good?).

    Regardless, the current situation clearly doesn't work. It would be great if we could find and promote the least invasive solutions.

  • Self-hosting a Git Forge is very feasible. Closest hosted alternative platform is GitLab but I don't think it's still EU since it was listed on NASDAQ. Being a remote company, they don't list a headquarters. I don't know where their servers are based.

    https://gitlab.com/

  • A quick lookup or from memory for these interesting suggestions:

    ZapMap : based in Bristol ElectoVerse : London ABRP : Part of Rivian now, US Google : US

    I really like ABRP but I suppose this will get cripled at some point as it's now part of a car manufacturer.

  • The camera is heated so that should not be the biggest problem. I don't think they have the software to make it work.

    I have not had obstacle detection work on the other modules aside from a person being nearby being detected. With that feature you will not see it working from close by, but it will destroy children's toys, drive over poop, destroy its own antennas by driving under tables, drive against tractors, ...

    It could be capable one day but not with this software (team).

  • This company overpromises and underdelivers as if it's a Chinese competition to do so.

    Source: own the lawn mower and blower

  • Really depends on what is considered nice about MacOS. Just had a new on-boarding with someone who really liked their Mac keybindings and it seems getting those dialed in is nicer (easier? better?) on KDE. I'd also generally gravitate towards Gnome for Mac users though.

    As a piece of advice for OP: Accept the use of keybindings over the touchpad. Mac has done a great job and I have not seen a Linux laptop/distro combination that nails it. Search for the pain-points after switching and ask about it (kindly) on a community like this.

  • The Apertus model is free and open. It can be ran on US and EU servers. I doubt you want to self-host these but you could. The smaller Apertus model can be ran locally with less than 16GB of VRAM but you likely want to run the larger variant.

    I suppose running an open model on US servers provides more security than running a closed model on US infrastructure. I don't know who runs these in Europe as a service.

  • I use Signal, Matrix and recently Delta Chat. The latter with only very limited amount of messages. It seems to just work.

    The UI is less complex than Element in my opinion but it lacks some extra features such as voice and video calls (which probably should be a separate thing). Onboarding was simple enough if you actually want to try, but hard enough for naysayers to say it will never catch on.

  • FreeCAD's Arch/BIM workbench

    Draw in 2D to create 3D walls. Position windows, doors and others in 3D. Some features like the roof or stairs have their own modules.

    You can always fall back to one of the other many workbenches should you need something not part of a typical home (weird stairs, a detailed cupboard, ...).

    I could not find documentation easily in the past but it likely exists. For a video introduction the FCBLounge channel (YouTube) provides great visual tutorials.

    I've documented part of our home in this to ideate remodeling. It can be used for pipework but I did not try that yet.

  • Having experimented with this a lot, I'd say it depends :P

    Keyboard only you can get by with 5fps or so, but there's no real feedback at that point.

    15fps is ok and quite usable. Artifacts are the more annoying thing at that rate. 30fps is really more then necessary (though I agree higher is nice on lcd displays).

    What bothered me most is the limited contrast, pixel density and limited amount of colors on color eink display.

  • Lexend Deca from https://www.lexend.com/ because it's the only font I could find which was studied during it's creation for being more readable for many people.

  • Like any other car, but less worry about the drivetrain and a bit more about the suspension.

    It seems batteries last quite wel. Our car has 250k km on it. The battery is fine (90%-ish) and the engine runs smooth. Listen for sounds of bearings failing if there's no extra sounds. Drive a second one of the same make and model to compare suspension and noise to.

    Check the reputation of the brand and see if it lives up to your standards in terms of wear.

  • I did not touch Windows during or after my CS degree. No clue what people are on about needing Windows. It was a challenge on my first job where they preferred us to use VMs instead (I did not and it became the norm because it is better).

    Graduated in Europe. We had a bunch going through the same. Campus computers were running Linux too. You need someone to champion it in the year and others will join.

  • Framework makes it their point but also charges for it. Some big make laptops also allow to upgrade parts.

    But lets not forget Linux specific laptops. They generally allow upgrading ram and storage. Slimbook even sold me a newer (but also new) keyboard when mine gave up after 5 years or so. Most parts seem to be available still.

    Some brands to look for in this group are Tuxedo, bto, slimbook, starbook. Clevo might work too.