

I am certainly not one of the younger folks and had never seen that before. That is awesome, thank you for sharing.
I am certainly not one of the younger folks and had never seen that before. That is awesome, thank you for sharing.
I like to tinker, my brother just wants something that works. I built a Voron, he got Prussa. We are both happy with our 3d printers.
Good news. After reading the article, it seems like the content and the course will still exist, it is just that Yale has decided that it cant afford to pay ULA’s to support the class.
For those who just want to learn, the course content can still be found here: https://www.edx.org/cs50
Yep, I love it. I told my wife about it and she thinks I’m crazy.
Unrelated to the question, but the capitalization of the seemingly random words in the title is interesting. I am going to guess you are a programmer and typically capitalize class or variable names out of habbit and that leaked slightly into the title of your post.
A fun next lesson is the benefit of apparent wind. In addition to the wind relative to the water, you have added wind generated by the movement of the boat. Since the lift generated is related to the speed of the wind relative to the boat, the faster the boat goes, the more lift you get. As a result, it is possible to actually sail faster than the wind speed of the wind relative to the water.
I’m pretty sure I did a bad job explaining that. Google can explain it better for sure.
Yeah, I wish I knew this about a year ago. Thanks.
That was my thought. Am I not a person?
I try to never use “the finger” when another driver is being an ass. In that case I always just give them a thumbs down and a sad face.
I save the middle finger for people who are being “nice”, especially when it is making things dangerous. I find it is the quickest way get them to just go.
I try to be coniderate while driving. Being predictable is safe. Deviating from the rules is dangerous. I think being safe more considerate than being “nice”.
Also, doesn’t the jetbrains license let you continue to use the version that was the latest as of when your license ended. It’s a small difference, but also kinda huge.
I use youtrack. It’s a project management tool. It’s not open source, but does have a self hostable option.
https://www.jetbrains.com/help/youtrack/server/installation-and-upgrade.html
I guess you’ve never heard of the National Organization of Restoring Men.
I swear I am not making this up.
I think it needs to be 5 or 8 so it’s a number from the Fibonacci scale.
It is also important that there is no possible way that a story point can meaningfuly represent time.
I know you asked about memory, but the computer I just assembled had a 750watt power supply. As an American I think we should refer to it as a “one horsepower power supply” instead.
I feel like most of my googling of simple code is because I know what I’m trying to do, but I don’t remember the correct function name and or language structure for the language I’m currently using.
Clearly this is what we call “self documenting code”.
I usually say “I’m a computer toucher” or “computer programmer” if I don’t want to talk about what I do. If I want to flex some nerd cred, and/or boast a little, I’ll usually say “I work with machine automation” or “robotics”. It tends to get a more curious response and I can talk about some of the weird stuff I’ve helped make.
On my current team, when we were trying to choose a style, my only input was “any style that can be checked/applied with a git commit hook.”
I get some people prefer reading code in a particular format. Let them configure their editor to apply it, but let’s keep the version history in one unavoidably consistent style. Pretty please.
It’s not exactly what I think you’re looking for, but depending on what you are trying to do, maybe look at hackmd/codimd.
It’s more like Google docs meets markdown formatting. It’s goal is realtime collaboration but I’ve definitely used it for syncing todo lists with people.
Codimd is the self hostable version.
Oh, and I think there is a way to have it sync with a GitHub repo too, in case that is useful.
Links for convenience:
This feels like the right place to link to the Kralyn Positron project which is a compact, open source portable 3D printer.
https://github.com/KRALYN/PositronV3
I started buying parts to make one but haven’t taken the time to get any of the machined parts manufactured yet.