directive0

joined 2 years ago
[–] directive0@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

100% dude. I was right there with you back in the day. My first "online" experience was a net game of M1 over MacTCP to my buddy down the street. After it came out all my Macs had a copy of Infinity and I wasted countless hours in Forge making wild maps. It was a great time in my life. I still play Aleph One now and then to kill time because its like a warm blanket to me now.

I will definitely give this new Marathon a shot at some point, but this gameplay is just not where I am at. I don't really fit into this new world of online experiences, maybe I'm just getting old and Marathon is moving past me for a new age. I guess that's fair. Its just hard to see as a die hard fan. Oh well.

See ya starside.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 0 points 2 months ago

Its amazing how much more authoritative I view people now when they're absently tossing a baseball around. Thanks DS9

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I wish they had just made a single player Marathon sequel... oh well. I will definitely give it a shot but confidence is low :(

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 6 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Not to defend SC too much, and full disclosure I don't play it. But I have friends who DO play it and it seems like they are having a lot of fun?

They aren't evangelists for the game or anything, so its not a fanboy situation. They just play it a lot, and with lots of other people. They have an online community and meet up IRL for events. Post vids of their exploits. It seems fun to me? I asked them about the bugs and stuff and they fully admit it is buggy and things are broken, they make no apologies for it. They figure out workarounds and share it with the crew. I don't know, these guys are usually pretty critical of games but they seem happy weirdly. Maybe a cult?

There is no fucking way that I am ever going to pay for a fake star ship or anything so I'm not even considering it. And the entire funding model of the game seems batshit insane to me. But to me it seems like the idea that the game is unplayable doesn't really match the reality? Its clearly not a good value proposition at all.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

Its weird I know I shouldn't but I kind of love NMS. Its such a broad but shallow game but I cant help but spend hours on it. Being able to just jet off to a new system and explore is excellent.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 7 points 5 months ago (3 children)

Not an expert but you may want to look at your z-offset? Maybe you're a little high off the bed?

 

Kinda nice to see Rebble backing down a bit and taking stock. I don't really blame them for their anxiety regarding pebbles future but honestly I was kind of confused by some of the issues they raised. Even this post seems kind of defensive but it's a step in the right direction. I'm especially pleased that they confirm they will be offering the face/app database to all. Phew.

I don't think any of us wanted a single entity to control the fate of pebble. And even when the group is a non profit or just a loose collection of FOSS people it's so easy for people to get territorial and precious. The whole accusing Core of stealing was embarrassing especially now that they admit they were just misreading server logs 😮‍💨

I was so frustrated that it looked like both core and Rebble were trying to ensure their control over the game, but I'm glad that both sides are clearly stating that the future of pebble is decentralized and open. It's the only way to keep a niche device like this breathing IMO.

I've seen some commenters over on the other news aggregate site complaining that this all will damage the user experience and make things less seamless. I'm kind of of the opinion that pebble will never be a zero configure seamless consumer device again. We may need to do some legwork as users, and I'm ok with that.

I'm especially looking forward to the prospect of weird custom firmwares and hacking. That always seemed like a great fit for pebble to me? I guess we'll see what the future holds and hopefully there will be no more fighting from here on in 🤞

 

Recently I've been pretty discouraged watching the drama surrounding Core and Rebble's ideas for the future of the Pebble face/app store. Eric Migicovsky has put up a video with his solution that makes the Pebble app open source and treats face/app sources more like a repository that you can subcribe to. It should be possible for anyone to make their own face/app repo and stock it with their apps if they wish. Pebble will maintain its own source and maybe work out payments etc.

I'm pretty into that idea, and I think its a good solution personally.

Also really enjoyed the look at more PT2 hardware. The removable back plate is fantastic. Looking forward to my PT2.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 0 points 6 months ago

Just as they were starting to figure it out and make a movie that if you squinted enough allllmost felt like a real star trek movie.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

Like the global links from Earth final conflict.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 2 points 10 months ago

I print my own drywall anchors all the time and they work really well, at least for my applications!

I use this model: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1288793

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 4 points 10 months ago (1 children)

"one on boil" is such a good expression for charging batteries. Stealing that.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 6 points 10 months ago

The NES sesame Street games are pretty good.

My youngest loved sesame Street countdown. it was really forgiving and taught her basic platformer mechanics.

[–] directive0@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Love my electric razor. It's 25 years old and still kicking. Never replaced the blades or battery. Ride or die electric forever. You can take it from my cold dead hands!

 

Was getting tired of searching around my toolbox for my electric screwdriver and its bits so I figured it was time to design a nice simple stand with space for my most used bits. I decided to give it a tray just to help with not losing screws. The project was modelled up in blender in an hour or so using a mix of sub-d and boolean workflow. The stand printed out nice on my old dependable ender-3 in about 6 hours. I did a number of test prints of just the holes so that I could get the fit right. Getting The bit holes right took time as my printers accuracy is just a bit off and different bits had extremely small differences in dimension. The bit holes actually taper slightly so that the gradually become .5 mm smaller. This saved me having to throw out a whole print if I got it wrong.

So far it's met my goals. I have some changes I'd like to do if I ever reprint:

  1. add compartments or seperators to the tray so I can use them as "steps" to aid in re-assembly of projects.
  2. add more space between the bits and the driver holder in the center. My finger can't get between there and it makes it hard to pull out the bits.
  3. make a base with a bearing so the whole thing spins.
  4. make a notch on the top so the driver can rest horizontal. No real reason just a nice feature that would add to the utility.

Link HERE should anyone want it.

 
 

I've inherited all my grandfathers radio and telegraph equipment. I have lots of memories of sitting on his lap in his radio room while he talked to people on the other side of the world before the internet was really a thing. He passed away in the mid 90's and I think he would have loved this modern world and all its tools for instant communication.

This piece is likely from Signal Electrics Telegraph learners kit, there appears to be many eras of this kit from the 1920s until the 40s. I suspect he got this around the 30's but I'm not sure. Its a really cool piece of retro tech tho.

 

I grabbed a beepy a little while back (if interested BE ADVISED: they've since gone dark and left a bunch of people holding out for one, I got really lucky and ordered super early) so I could work on some python stuff on the go. I didn't like having all the parts exposed, and the cases available seemed too flimsy for my liking.

I fired up blender and designed a unibody case for it. Printed it out on my Ender 3 and its been pretty great. I use it with some software I'm writing to turn a raspberry pi into a portable sensor data acquisition and visualization platform called a Picorder (Pi + Tricorder).

Nice back view with my picorder logo

It took a couple revisions to get here, mostly to get the feel in the hand right. I wanted some bulbousness to make it easier to hold.

It's designed so the PCB slides into it and is affixed by two screws, and then a top cap is secured with four more screws to protect the top.

I've been printing a couple years now and enclosures are still my favourite item to design and print. So satisfying to hold something in your hand that was once just a 3D model and is now a fully real object. I wanted to add some content here as I've enjoyed looking at the other posts!

I wish you all easy first layers and good prints!

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