overzeetop

joined 2 years ago
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[–] overzeetop 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Display Fusion and Fancy Zones...I've got a lot of setup to do this weekend.

[–] overzeetop 2 points 1 year ago

A plasma would be like sitting in front of a heat lamp. My old plasma make me have to put a booster fan on the duct to that room. I do have to be careful when zooming and panning; the family was scoping out Aberdeen, Scotland last night via Google Earth and I had to be a good bit slower on the controls.

[–] overzeetop 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

In a way it's baffling that we have so many "heavy" elements on Earth, given the way they are formed and how (almost) impossibly rare they should be.

[–] overzeetop 1 points 1 year ago

Would have been circa '94. My build was definitely up in that range, possibly without the monitor. I'm also certain that my HD was measured in MB; might have been either a 250 or 330.

[–] overzeetop 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Mostly. If your locality is served by Amtrak - and only a few dozen cities are out of the 3 million square miles of ConUS - then it can be somewhat convenient and cost effective if you plan your travel more than 2-3 months in advance. It’s about 2/3 the speed of car travel, but more comfortable, generally. If you buy tickets less than 3 weeks ahead the prices are about 4x what they are for booking at 3-6 months out. Also, unless you live in one of the 2-3 hub areas, trains run only once or twice a day. For comparison, Last time I checked it’s like £70 to go from London to Aberdeen and takes 7 hours and trains leave every hour or two. From Roanoke to New York - 80 miles closer than the UK route I know of - it’s $200, 9 hours, and only two trains run per day - the first departs at 6:20am, the second at 4:15p (and gets in around 2am). It’s only a 7.5 hour drive and $40-50 in gas to go from Roanoke to NYC, and it’s pretty easy to park outside the city and take a commuter train in.

Oh, and there’s no workable hub and spoke system due to the few trains and long travel times. My daughter is just 300 miles away at school and the city has a train stop. It’s a 5 hour drive one way. It takes two days and 3 train changes to get from her city to the closest station to me, about a 45 minute drive away. It’s ridiculous.

[–] overzeetop 12 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Man, my first homebuild out of college was an absolute monster with 8MB of RAM so I could run NT at home. $640 just for the memory. I did cheap out on the CPU and only got the 75MHz Pentium, though we ran 90s at work. Wing Commander III was awesome on that thing.

[–] overzeetop 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, US is a real backwater when it comes to data - availability, privacy, you name it. Heck, my ISP will let me install for free, but I either have to buy my own modem or pay them $15/mo to rent one of theirs. I technically get wifi roaming with the company I use, but it's rarely useful. I won't torrent without a VPN; my ISP is a hardass for torrenting.

There are decent plans in some areas in the big cities in the US, but outside of that it's pretty bleak...and there's a lot of "outside of the cities" in the US.

[–] overzeetop 7 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Knowing who your provider is would (might) help. Xfinity has a 1TB or 1.2TB soft cap, which you can exceed once or twice a year without concern. Beyond that you fall into their top (I think it's) 1% of users and may be asked to scale back or to pay an excess usage fee (which was non-trivial the last time I looked - something like $10/50GB).

[–] overzeetop 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Q: why WotC are so committed to making plans that are so anti-consumer

A: fuck you, give us more money

I think you nailed it.

[–] overzeetop 3 points 1 year ago

It's been a little while, but they gutted the mesh editing tools in he free version. They also dropped the number of active models, restricted certain file-functions (maybe assemblies...I don't do any/many), and limited file import/export.

[–] overzeetop 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Wait, really? I'm going to have to go check next time I log into my torrenting box.

[–] overzeetop 1 points 1 year ago

It appears to be built specifically for designing electronics enclosures with 3D printing in mind. I'm sure it's a great utility, and I don't mean to argue to no end, but to me a tool built specifically for 3D printed design would have core functionality which offers layer line alignment and orientation, custom and customizable internal structure (what we call "fill"), and a parametric engine to adjust the design and internal structure based on layer and nozzle thickness. While these are all currently slicer-like functions, slicers are absolute trash at being able to customize a part for strength, stiffness, and failure mode selection. (Yes, I'm a structural engineer - I actually do know about these things and design for them - usually being at odds with the slicer over just such effects)

Anyway - I'm sure Dune3D comes in handy for its designer's purpose, and I'll probably file this for the next time I think about fighting a Pi case in CAD.

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