I can see a few useful use-cases, mainly deleting unwanted stuff / people from a photo.
I can see a few useful use-cases, mainly deleting unwanted stuff / people from a photo.
Okay, that’s next level.
Cries in AMS Lite.
Settings, mostly. The layering is always there, but how visible it is depends on the layer height. Both the Depresso and Spyro were made with 0.2mm layer height, which is a good compromise between looks-good/prints-fast. If you want something that looks really nice, you’d go to 0.08mm layer height (the lowest this particular printer can go with this particular nozzle size). The print would take around 2.5 times longer with 0.08mm layer height.
Material also affects this, but PLA generally is the easiest to print with and looks among the best visually. If the print speed were really high it would affect it as well, but it was well under the maximum speeds.
This is a FDM printer which basically lays one layer of heated plastic over another, there are also SLA printers which can go much lower layer heights and thus the prints are visually much better, though use-case of such printers are limited to pretty looking pieces, you can’t really make anything functional with them.
Edit: If you want the prints to look really great, you’re gonna have to do some post-processing anyway, like sanding down the uglier parts and painting it with some acrylic paint. That way you avoid the visible layers as well.
Bambu Lab A1 and mostly PLA for material (aka the easiest one to print).
When I need something flexible, I use some TPU. And when I need something that will hold for a long time, I use PETG.
I make all kinds of stuff, mostly toys and household items, sometimes I design something myself (generally the stuff that’s meant to be useful, not pretty), sometimes I use models other people created.
Currently I’m printing a puzzle for kids.
Edit: a recent print of mine:
Welcome! Both to Lemmy and lemmings.world!
We use .lh, short for localhost. For local network services I use service discovery and .local. And for internal stuff we just use a subdomain of our domain.
If you fancy oversimplification, yes. Otherwise it’s of course more complex, but well, where’s the fun in that, right?
It was millennia ago when I first read “don’t ship your own date/time library”. Guess these fellas somehow missed it.
(I did this thing a while ago, but hopefully it doesn’t count since it’s a joke library)
Nix shell basically just downloads the software (if it’s not already downloaded) and then modifies your PATH to include the new software.
Persistent data stay persistent.
Nix shell has one use case common with docker (local development), but other than that the solutions are not similar at all.
Yeah, it can do other stuff, I was simply stating a use-case I consider valid. Doesn’t matter that others have come up with the feature before. This is presumably better at detecting the object and removing / replacing it.