Also, how much are you adjusting, in terms of steps?
redbr64
Yeah, a warm soapy wash is definitely a good step to include here. Let us know how it comes out
I was gonna say the z offset is too low, so the filament is getting squeezed around the nozzle and bunching up in those gobs. Did your adjustment work?
Oh lord, as someone teaching a bunch of technologically illiterate college students something that requires a lot less computer skills, teaching CAD to today's high schoolers sounds rough. I am a millennial that started on DOS, and joke to them that back in my day, to play video games I had to climb uphill both ways in the snow, and, use a terminal lol. And funny that you mention your KDE setup, I use plasma and one of my first thoughts was "I bet there's a KDE widget/applet for that" haha
Well, you just came up with a great way to sell it, since we are already basically treating politics like sports. Brackets for president!
Ooooh that looks interesting. I haven't messed around much with tailscale since I set it up a few years back and hadn't noticed this. Funny, I was just the other day wondering if they might have something like that, but didn't look it up. Thanks!
Yeah, what @[email protected] suggested is definitely the easiest thing and super practical - I got family members on my tailnet for this purpose. I am however now also looking into some kind of tunneled, reverse proxied and authenticated way to expose a few of my services to other friends where I don't want to have to put them on tailscale or potentially expose them to more than needed via that route.
I haven't started yet, but I am updating my network set up soon to install a dedicated OPNsense router as the edge for my network. From there, the plan is to have a cloudflare tunnel that accesses some of these services via a caddy reverse proxy, with Authelia for authentication. That's the part I have studied enough to feel confident I can do. I am a little weaker on the networking aspects of this, which is where I need to study some more - like isolating those services that are exposed in my network, while still giving them access to some other needed resources within it, etc.
If you use bitwarden as your password manager, it can also auto generate those for you when creating a login
I was looking for something similar for a while, like something for simple relational data with some GUI for data entry, aka "I don't wanna write a little web app just for this". I had used AirTable at work before at work so that's what came to mind and my searching was basically for "open source or selfhosted alternative to AirTable".
Came across some decent candidates, can't remember all the names, but the one I tried, Grist, was pretty straightforward and did the job: easy relational data setup, GUI for all basic data types including file uploads, easy to create input forms, and widgets that talk to the API and you can customize with JavaScript. Setup was easy with docker
EDIT: other names that came up when looking were NocoDB and BaseRow ( I don't remember why I didn't try them for my specific needs)
I just started using both recently and it's great. For the fzf file search, there's even some extension that can show a preview pane of text files and even images!
Thanks for that thorough explanation! As someone that knows enough to be suspicious of the usual problematic factors, but not really aware of the details, this was great info
Oh sorry, how many hundredths of millimeter are you are adjusting at a time. You should just make small adjustments and try them on a small first layer test print. But I guess you're live adjusting, so what I said doesn't make a lot of sense