It’s a very famous mosque in Baghdad, the al-Askari Mosque.
It was bombed twice during the invasion of Iraq. I don’t believe by US forces actually but it’s a good before/after for the joke.
If I did a before/after of the Raytheon knife missile (an actual thing and tbh one of the least horrifying weapons used to be the world police) would need a Gore warning.
I’ve found it useful in the rare case that I’ve posted some project and someone wants to use it and has a question or something after the main thread is locked. I’ve had a few people reach out just to thank me for solving their problem which is always nice.
I remember many moons ago I was on a hike with my scout troop and one night we camped in this group campground with a lot of…well…super rednecks, most of which appeared to just live there.
Anyway, one of these little redneck kids (maybe 6 or 7 years old) for whatever reason picks one of our scouts (who was maybe 15?) and just basically starts following him around the campsite calling him “Daddy”.
It was hilarious…to everyone except him.
I wish I could say that was the weirdest thing that’s ever happened on one of those hikes.
That would be interesting here, but it would make a sociology dissertation (in a bad way) on Reddit.
I think I behaved basically the same there and here, but the DMs I get here are all: the post we were discussing got removed, here’s the last thing I wanted to say. On Reddit, I got those, plus occasional death and doxxing threats, sometimes from a person who was pretending to have a civil conversation with me in a comments section at the same time they’re messaging me threats.
You awaken from your slumber, refreshed and ready to face the day. You had stayed the night at your childhood home, visiting family, and the artifacts from that era that had the night before cast a ghostly presence were now starting to feel much more familiar. Your phone, on the table beside your bed, starts to ring.
100 bed is pretty reasonable. 260/270 seems pretty toasty, but if it works it works.
Do you have a bedslinger, CoreXY, or something else? Bedfans made a world of difference for chamber heating rate. There are a number of bedfan and active carbon combinations that I’ve found to be fairly effective at chamber heating and reducing odors.
Are you recently enclosed? If yes, beware that everything will expand enough to throw off your first layer if you don’t accommodate for it.
I’ve only run ASA so far, but even sticking with the same brand I’ve noticed that different colors have very different temperature and extrusion multiplier needs. Prior to ASA I stuck with PETG and I used the same settings for any color but white.
I have an enclosed CoreXY printer. There’s a lot of variety in filament affordability, so I’m working my way through the (cheap) stuff on Amazon, slowly but surely. The 3DF branded ABS used here looks nice but was wound like hot trash. I ordered three rolls and I think I need to return two of them.
Any particular brands you’ve run that have been consistently good? I’m eventually going to try the good stuff like Polymaker, but I can get two rolls of play material for the price of one nice roll.
I’m currently running polymaker ASA. It’s not cheap, but it’s not that out of the ordinary price wise for ASA. I am somewhat tempted to give Atomic Filament’s ABS a go since they were one of my go to PETG companies and their filament was super consistent. Polymaker’s ASA has been fairly solid other than the fairly different printing needs of different colors, which is something I haven’t experienced on other types of filament before. Maybe that’s normal for ASA though.
I’m running a bedfan/filter combo called “the filter”. It’s drastically reduced chamber heating times for me. No idea if theres a version out there for your printer, but there might be given it’s popularity and similarities with the Voron trident.
FDM printed plastics aren’t food safe because melting the plastic and creating layers makes it porous and a breeding ground for bacteria. Brass nozzles also contain lead albeit in trace amounts.
I really should have mentioned that this isn’t a conventional bento box. It’s a DIY filer unit to cut down on some of the ABS and ASA nasties that come with printing.
Hardware bring up is when you design a pcb or something and there doesn’t yet exist any firmware for it. It would be the ability to debug the board and write firmware for it.
Celeste is a critically acclaimed indie game. It became a meme to call it a “hidden gem” because for a while it was being brought up constantly on various forums as some underrated game, even though it was quite well-known and highly rated.
I’ve been meaning to take a gander at Rust and Go for about a year now and poke around, this is a good reminder for me to stop putting it off, so t4t. I did walk through a Go implementation of some authentication RFC a couple years ago and it was very straightforward.
Maybe they want to avoid java coding patterns. FactoryFactoryGenerator kind of stuff. Maybe they want to teach their own java coding patterns and want someone coming in with a blank slate so they don’t have to unlearn habits. Maybe they’re tired of diploma mill programmers applying and are using this as a resume filter tripwire.
We had an outside contractor bring us some code once that was thousands of lines of Python to do a very simple job. I was perplexed. I dove in to figure out what the problem was, and somehow I was looking at the most Java-esque Python code I could imagine. What’s worse is that he implemented his own “Java style” property getters and setters for all the Python classes, which obviously aren’t needed because you can simply access properties directly. In the end I took an 80 line snippet of his code (which actually did the work we needed), swapped out all the getters and setters, and deleted all the rest.
That’s not to say that python coding habits are the best either – certainly they’re terrible when translating outside of python (most of the time). And even within python, someone who is used to with only the base modules will write it differently than writing PyQt and still completely different than someone doing numpy code… because the styles of coding of the underlying system change your coding mode. Like, my variables are all CamelCase when doing user interfaces with Qt because it makes sense there, stylistically.
Definitely the first. I work in ML, and I find for instance people with background mainly in c# to be the least fit for my field, particularly if they have long experience. So I understand this kind of requests
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