cyberwolfie

joined 2 years ago
[–] cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 days ago

ThinkPad T14s Gen 5

[–] cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 days ago

Someone has obviously not been forced to work with Windows 11? :p

It's a massive upgrade and miles better than what I came from, and while not ideal, I'm certainly not letting perfect be the enemy of the good here. Edge is just for those MS365 apps I need to work with once in a while (and a couple of other services that rely on SSO, most annoyingly GitHub). I'll live

Also, I'm a KDE person, but so far I don't hate GNOME.

[–] cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yeah, but it has also required many hard fought battles internally, and I can be happy with my coworkers and team lead for taking the charge in several of those. It helps having had multiple examples of their policies getting in the way of getting stuff done, and that we are able to accomplish our jobs when we get our way.

Worst part is that we're not a terribly big company - but the IT department can still make it feel like I work in a multinational megacorp some times. I can only imagine what it is to actually work in one of those....

[–] cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (6 children)

That was an intense intro, so I had to stop watching. Did he end up enjoying it and sticking with it?

[–] cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Nice - I've done a similar thing for my mom, except she was transitioning from macOS (but had used Windows a lot previously for work). So far she has had a package conflict that broke the package system (Signal was installed from their PPA) which raised a rather ominous error message for her ("Your package system is broken"). I could fix it easily as I had set up VNC via SSH, and that worked as expected first time I needed it, but it's not something she would be able to do by herself. And I still haven't installed Singal in a way that won't break things later yet...

She still uses her old Macbook on and off, and there are some things she only has access through that machine. I want to set up better cross platform solutions for her. Especially file sync and images needs to be fixed, but I've not landed on a way to do that. I could set her up with an account on my Nextcloud, but I don't like having access to her files and I also would not want to be liable for her files disappearing. Same with images. I use Nextcloud for images myself, have thought of setting up Immich. But same thing here, don't really want to have access to her stuff (not sure if Immich can be set up to be E2EE?)

[–] cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 month ago

I installed Mint on a newly acquired used Thinkpad for my mom, to get her used to it as her Macbook is showing signs of giving up. So far it was smooth sailing until one day the package system broke due to some conflicts (I had set up Signal via their PPA). I had already set up remote access so I could easily fix it for her in a matter of minutes, but she would never be able to fix it herself even though the instructions were clear. Other than this though, she enjoys it. But I still need to set up a couple of additional things, in particular file sync and some way of managing her photos.

 

I got a Prusa CORE One earlier this year, and so far I've been very happy. I have not ventured outside of the default settings though, and I use their own filament (only PLA). This has worked perfectly fine so far, but now I ran into an issue, and I figure it's time to come out of the "default settings"-bubble and learn some more about this stuff.

I am trying to print a Gridfinity holder for a rolling pin, so I tried to cut out a appropriately sized cylinder in a template with a boolean operator in Blender. When the print got to the concave portion, the print started to fail - uncertain how to best explain it, but the overhangs over the infill did not properly bridge and the filament started to warp so that the print head would hit it on the next pass (and make some nasty scratching sounds). I stopped the print when I noticed this. See an image here:

I am uncertain whether this is due to the model being poorly optimized for 3D-printing, if the printer settings for the filament were off or if I could've tweaked the slicing settings to achieve a better result.

Is it obvious, looking at the image, what the primary reason for this failure is?

Note: I've ended up printing this again already with a regular rectangular cutout instead of a cylindrical one, so I am just trying to learn more about what made this fail to learn more.