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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)WJ
wjrii @lemmy.world
Posts 76
Comments 928
Hobbies Wednesday - what have you done this week?
  • Still Tuesday here, but I'll jump in. Working on the CAD file for the 3D printed case of my next mechanical keyboard. For this one, I actually designed a super primitive PCB instead of hand-wiring all the keys, and it's on its way from China. I'll still need to wire the Raspberry Pi Pico myself, since I wanted to start by dipping my toe in to see if I could route the switches' matrix and the mounting holes for the diodes I'll need.

  • Handheld Linux Retrogaming recommendation? [solved-ish]
  • Do you find you are able to emulate much that can make use of the analog sticks? The RG Arc-S and -D have similar internals and a nice screen, but they seem to have been consigned to the discount pile for lack of analog sticks (and maybe being late to the game for RK3566 models). As a Genesis kid, I always liked the Sega controllers of that era.

  • Handheld Linux Retrogaming recommendation? [solved-ish]
  • I think realistically 5th gen would be the limit in the price range, right? Any recommendations on which are most versatile? I understand Android can be better for some emulators, and Linux for others.

  • Handheld Linux Retrogaming recommendation? [solved-ish]
  • Thanks! That class of device is probably where I'm leaning, having now poked around some other sites as well. Honestly, those issues are about what I'd expect from this pricepoint/feature combination, but they don't seem like dealbreakers and sounds like it's a usable SBC in a gaming friendly package, which is about what I'm after.

  • Handheld Linux Retrogaming recommendation? [solved-ish]

    I figure it will be a good thing to throw onto a wish list for whatever holiday is coming next. In a perfect world, it would run a Linux-based OS, be moddable, have decent ergonomics for an adult, and kinda just generally not suck. Is a hundred bucks a reasonable price point? One hundred fifty? I grew up in the 8-bit and 16-bit eras but never completely stopped gaming, so I'd be interested in emulating somewhat newer stuff too. I normally just plug in a controller and find a desktop emulator, but portable could be fun, especially if it had potential for general SBC computing.

    Edit: I think I have a better idea what I'm looking for now. The Anbernic devices seem to more or less match up with what I am looking for, so I'll start there with a more informed search. Thanks! Happy to get more suggestions and tips, though.

    17
    Space Dust on my ErgodoxEZ
  • Cool. I've always been intrigued by them. I have an Orbit Fusion out in the living room, with a button remapped to allow a grip closer to the classic 2-button Orbit. I just can't quit that scroll ring.

  • I feel like Xenu should be involved somewhere... [comment is finished in the body of the post.]
  • I can't pull anything coherent out of this, of course, but there's some fun bits and pieces floating in the brain stew there.

    • The Hiawatha Crater is a 31km wide impact basin under a glacier in Greenland, but the meteor that caused it is estimated to have fallen almost 60mya, so "only" a few million years after the Dinosaurs took their big hit.

    • There are often cross cultural commonalities in legends and other folklore, enough to merit a classification system, Aarne–Thompson–Uther, that while problematic in how it treats elements found in stories not common in cultures well-studied by western academics, is still very much in use in academia. Of course, most of this comes down to "humans being humans" and few scholars think its worthwhile to go on wild goose chases trying to find actual events inspiring specific tropes, to say nothing of this... erm... theory(?).

    • As far as I can tell, there is no meteor in the Kaaba, but set into a corner is the "Black Stone," a cemented aggregation of pieces of a large, likely igneous stone. As an object of veneration, it appears to pre-date Islam, as does the basic notion of the Kaaba itself, which was already a holy site for local religion when Muhammed came along. There is a broader tradition in the eastern Mediterranean and Middle East of including large stones ("baetyls") in temples as representations of gods. The Roman Emperor Elagabalus was born and raised in Syria, and when he became emperor he (among other much weirder shit) brought along the "god" Elagabalus, the local temple stone, and tried to insist it be worshipped in Rome as a deity superior to Jupiter. If there is one thing Romans of that era did not like, it was being told that other gods were better than than their own, or even anything other quaint provincial re-namings of the Roman gods. They didn't necessarily need you to believe their religion (orthodoxy), but you sure as shit needed to to observe it (orthopraxy), and fucking around with the practice of the state religion is a very good excuse for your Praetorian Guard to finally stab the bejeezus out of you (and your mom).

    • Finally, Pixie and Brutus is a pretty cute comic, if maybe a bit overexposed and SEO'd.

  • I liked Fusion 360, I like Onshape - but I'd rather like something that I won't lose over the whims of one company. So, what?
  • Yup. At this point, "locally installed, reliable, parametric modeling on Linux" = "FreeCAD, including Ondsel, and SolveSpace". That's it. Well, there's code-to-CAD as well, which obviously retains parametric history, but goes about it very differently than a design tree.

    For non-parametric modeling, BricsCAD and Plasticity enter the discussion. For parametric on the web, OnShape works very well but I hate their licensing scheme and the huge doughnut hole in their pricing model.

  • Sovcit has a question.
  • I LOVE MY KIDS AND I TAKE CARE OF MY KIDS BUT DON'T Y'ALL UNDERSTAND?!?!?!? THAT STUPID BITCH WHO WAS ALWAYS CALLING THE COPS ON ME WANTS TO LIVE IN THE SAME HOUSE AS THEM THAT MY MONEY WOULD BE PAYING FOR!!!111!!1! CAN YOU BELIEVE THAT SHIT!?!

    ...

    THEY'RE PROBABLY NOT MINE ANYWAY.

    ...

    YOU KNOW WHAT? FUCK IT. THEY CAN FEND FOR THEMSELVES. UNGRATEFUL SHITS.

    ...

  • I liked Fusion 360, I like Onshape - but I'd rather like something that I won't lose over the whims of one company. So, what?
  • I think the guide I did at [email protected] is still in pretty decent shape.

    I actually settled on Alibre Design. Permanent license at half the cost of a year of OnShape for a slightly dated but very capable parametric modeler, and the free trial made Parametric modeling click for me in a way FreeCAD didn't. It comes with a renderer of a similar class, though I haven't tried that yet. Changing colors of parts has been enough for my needs.

    FreeCAD has apparently fixed the topological naming issue, one of the big things that was keeping them so far behind the commercial suites. It's already in the weekly builds, along with several other enhancements pioneered in the Realthunder fork, including UI enhancements and a default Assembly workbench. Version 1 is going to come out in the late summer or early fall, I think. Ondsel is FreeCAD but they have some venture funding to pay developers to work on the main project and to bolt-on an optional paid PDM system (download from their GitHub and you don't have to sign up for anything). I had some crashing issues on both Windows and Linux when trying to import DXF files into either flavor, and as you say, there's still that learning curve, but I can get a part done in it now if I need to.

    SolveSpace can do some nice things and will teach you good techniques.

    I had the same issues as you with OnShape, particularly since their free licensing is very weird, and in the worst case it implies that while YOU must use your designs non-commercially, no one else is similarly bound. It's sloppy legal drafting, and that annoys the little black kernel of lawyerness still sunk down in my heart. Fusion has become the poster child for free feature erosion and price hikes.

    BricsCAD Shape is a basically an AutoCAD clone warped and twisted to act like SketchUp, and it works on Linux. It's meant to be the tease to get people into their full-suite ecosystem, but I couldn't find any legal limitations on the free version.

    Depending on what it is you're scanning, the people mentioning Blender may have a good point.

    Shapr3D at $300/year might also be a good option.

    Finally, for your particular workflow, Plasticity at $150 permanent license may hit the exact sweet spot. Definitely try their free trial. Some of the other programs I tried are also interesting.

  • Jumblie #266

    jumblie.com Jumblie

    A word search game with new words and themes daily

    Jumblie

    Not my best work today.

    Jumblie #266 🟠🟢🔵🔴 5 guesses in 2m 49s https://jumblie.com

    2
    CAD @lemmy.world wjrii @lemmy.world

    FreeCAD weekly dev builds now contain the toponaming fix

    github.com [Problem] User Models break when topological entities change name (Topological Naming Issue) · Issue #8432 · FreeCAD/FreeCAD

    Problem description The FreeCAD Topological Naming issue is well known. It has been a concern for years but no issue exists for it. The resolution of this issue will involve many individual Pull Re...

    [Problem] User Models break when topological entities change name (Topological Naming Issue) · Issue #8432 · FreeCAD/FreeCAD

    I imagine they're targeting their meetup in August to announce version 1.0.

    Weekly Builds Download

    0
    www.cbssports.com Big 12 considering private equity investment of up to $1 billion for as much as 20% of conference

    The proposed deal with a Luxembourg-based firm would bring a massive influx of cash to the league

    Big 12 considering private equity investment of up to $1 billion for as much as 20% of conference

    This "good or bad" question will absolutely depend on the specifics of the deal, but the story certainly highlights what a weird place we're in these days.

    7

    Unnecessary Confession Time...

    Sometimes if I type “LOL”, but I didn’t laugh out loud, I’ll do a quiet little chuckle so I’m not technically a liar.

    I can’t blow bubbles in bubblegum beyond a sad little pea sized thing.

    I can’t snap my fingers either.

    I think The Last Jedi is the fourth best Star Wars film, behind only the original trilogy.

    26
    CAD @lemmy.world wjrii @lemmy.world

    FreeCAD official blog: FreeCAD gets a logo upgrade

    I think they picked one of the better ones, though now I regret not screenshotting the poll to remind myself of which ones I voted for.

    !

    0
    CAD @lemmy.world wjrii @lemmy.world
    hackaday.com Turbocase Generates A PCB Shell For You

    Our PCBs greatly benefit from cases – what’s with all the pins that can be accidentally shorted, connectors that stick out of the outline, and cables pulling the board into different di…

    Turbocase Generates A PCB Shell For You

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16141810

    0
    www.texastribune.org Texas A&M bonfire will not return to campus

    Resuming the bonfire was “not in the interest” of Texas A&M, said school President Mark Welsh III.

    Texas A&M bonfire will not return to campus

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16228461

    > Texas A&M bonfire will not return to campus > > After a monthslong review, Texas A&M University decided not to bring back the student bonfire tradition it discontinued 25 years ago after a deadly accident, President Mark Welsh III said Tuesday. > > For decades, students built a 60-foot bonfire every year ahead of football matches between A&M and the University of Texas at Austin. The tradition was suspended after tragedy struck in 1999, when a stack of logs collapsed in the middle of the night, killing 12 people and injuring dozens, some severely. > > Welsh said reviving the tradition would not be in the best interest of the university. > > “After careful consideration, I decided that Bonfire, both a wonderful and tragic part of Aggie history, should remain in our treasured past,” Welsh said.

    5

    Hand wired a southpaw 1800(-ish) keyboard with no stabilizers

    Time+3D printer+laser engraver=keeb

    I had these cheap clone keycaps lying around, and I've been wanting to try a southpaw, as well as a no-stabs board that can accommodate sculpted keycap profiles, so here we are. Had to make a few compromises on layout to fit the keycaps I had on hand, but it's feeling pretty usable so far. Outemu dustproof green for MOAR CLICKY.

    12

    Just finished the first Honor Harrington book

    ...maybe a little too on the nose with channeling Horatio Hornblower and Jack Aubrey, there's some truly problematic stuff with the native Medusans that goes all but uncommented upon, there's some reactionary politics that may just be de rigeur for 20th century military sci-fi (I don't know... would be happy to be educated), and the characterizations are almost beside the point, I guess.

    On the plus side, the world-building is starting out pretty meticulous in a satisfying way (except for Manticoran dates, which is there for good in-universe reasons, but Weber seems to be using it to be the one ongoing reminder that this the distant future and not exactly England in Space), there's a nice hyper-competence problem-solving ship's crew vibe that will feel familiar to Star Trek fans, and the descriptions of actual shipboard action are very engrossing. Stylistically, there's nothing to write home about, but it's clear prose and allowing for the aforementioned weak characterizations, there's nothing egregious either.

    I am cautiously optimistic going forward, and if you had the budget (or could get an animated series greenlit), it seems to me that the universe and Honor herself could be spruced up and modernized into a really compelling space opera franchise that would be well-paced for TV.

    10

    Alt-Country/Americana: Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit - If We Were Vampires

    So, let's close out this little arc before I head out on vacation, hopefully to be less online for a bit. Technically a little bit older but very much of the same Xennial bent as Justin Townes Earle, Jason Isbell has established himself as arguably the preeminent Americana singer/songwriter of his generation. Struggling with so many of the same demons, even at times with the conscious notion that it might be a right of passage, he and Earle became friends in Isbell's early days with the iconic roots rock band Drive By Truckers. If anything, DBT and early Isbell's sound hearken back to Steve Earle's early commercial albums, with a lot of hard charging electric guitar. In an arc that reminds outside observers of various "path not taken" alternate universe narratives, Isbell found what has seemed to be a fairly sustained sobriety and reoriented a phase of his career to unpacking what it has all meant, how to live with who he is, and has pulled remarkable creativity out of a type of stability that seems to frighten a certain type of young artist.

    If We Were Vampires is a southern Gothic love song, though not really touching on the supernatural, more like what if an Anne Rice reader wrote a brilliant ballad. Listening to it was one of those "wow" moments, when I just perk up at a lyricist who absolutely nailed it on a song. I'm hardly alone in admiring his work, and a song or two only scratches the surface.

    To stitch this thread back on itself, and close the loop, here's Isbell's rumination on his friend Justin Townes Earle, wistful but also with a decent amount of survivors' guilt and lingering resentment.

    1

    Alt-Country/Americana (serious gospel influences on this one): Justin Townes Earle Performs "Harlem River Blues" on Letterman

    You want to talk about a legacy? Try being Steve Earle's kid, named after Townes Van Zandt, and inheriting every bit of talent and disfunction that implies. Always looking to push clear of their shadow, his voice (both as a singer and a writer) was decidedly less country, but still brilliant and deeply rooted in American roots music. Unfortunately, even if he found a place outside his father's legacy, he didn't escape his namesake's path, passing away from an accidental OD in 2020.

    Bonus points for the willfully inane patter from Dave and Paul in the video, and especially on this one, pretending like they weren't listening to the lyrics (being suicidal in one and trying desperately not to be suicidal in the other) to keep the network suits at bay.

    2

    Kiddo wanted Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur keycaps. Kiddo got them.

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/15779428

    > If you use the right ink, the right plastic keycaps made for mechanical keyboards, and the right settings on your laser, you can effectively dye-sublimate any design you want. > > https://pixelfed.social/i/web/post/699804325565108276

    0

    Kiddo wanted Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur keycaps. Kiddo got them.

    If you use the right ink, the right plastic keycaps made for mechanical keyboards, and the right settings on your laser, you can effectively dye-sublimate any design you want.

    https://pixelfed.social/i/web/post/699804325565108276

    11
    CAD @lemmy.world wjrii @lemmy.world

    Cascade Studio: web based Code to CAD using OpenCASCADE kernel

    zalo.github.io Cascade Studio

    A Full Live-Scripted CAD Kernel in the Browser

    Github: https://github.com/zalo/CascadeStudio

    1

    Alt-Country/Americana ("Roots Rock" if you want to drill down even more): Steve Earle - Guitar Town

    Steve Earle's entire career posits the question: What if that slightly cringey try-hard kid that kept coming around were actually a world-class talent in his own right?

    Earle idolized Townes Van Zandt and his cohort of Austin/Denver/Nashville singer songwriters, and sort of insinuated himself into their circle, but they put up with him because he was actually a good songwriter, and brought a harder rock sensibility that was unique and interesting. I can't say I find his output as consistent as Van Zandt or Guy Clark, but the highs are high, he's a grand and earnest storyteller (if not exactly a wry or subtle one) and there's a thumping beat and a unique energy to a lot of his stuff that can be really refreshing in between my endless playlist of murder ballads.

    1

    Alt-Country/Americana: Dublin Blues. Guy Clark.

    If Townes Van Zandt is the Bob Dylan of highly literate country-adjacent songwriters, his buddy Guy Clark is the Springsteen. Maybe a little less transcendently brilliant, but more straightforward about the human condition, you might say "efficiently poetic" maybe, and with a better ear for what will sell and a less publicly dramatic personal story.

    Dublin Blues is a personal favorite, just a brilliant example of communicating the universal by writing the specific.

    1

    Alt-Country/Americana: Townes Van Zandt - Pancho & Lefty (Live in Austin, 1975)

    Casual live performance from an old documentary. A few minor lyrical tweaks for those who know the song well, but a lovely performance from probably the iconic Texas troubadour.

    6

    Like if the essence of a 1970s clown were distilled into a jingle: The Alachua County Fair Song

    Welcome to the intermittent hell my brain has been hitting me with for for 25 years.

    0