Skip Navigation
Posts
0
Comments
219
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • Yeah, I struggle with Organic modeling. I think it's because I was trained in parametric for engineering, but I just mind-blank when approaching "how do I make this complex shape?" in Blender. CAD's approach feels very straightforward and intuitive; I know where each feature is defined and can tweak it fairly easily. Blender... doesn't. And I know it's definitely not me, because I've seen people do very powerful things with it.

    Like, I've run through a lot of the tutorials, and every time they get to "Okay, time for you to make this simple shape on your own!", I immediately slip back into CAD modeling mindset, which isn't really compatible with Blender.

  • From your comments it sounds like this is Europe? In the US, 3-phase residential is rare - usually limited to large apartment buildings.

    Usually what we have is a "split phase" system, where it comes in at 240v and a local ground is used to divide it into two 120v legs.

    BTW if you ever move into a house where someone has put outdoors on the same rcd as the rest of the house, then do yourself a favor and get a separate combo rcd/fuse for outdoors.

    It varies by state, but some states have requiring outdoor outlets to be on a separate breaker or GFCI (RCD) outlet already, for just this reason.

  • I'm in a similar boat right now - I use the Student Edition ($60-100 a year, depending on sales, locally installed vs. using the cloud-based 3Dexperience).

    It's not a bad deal by any means, but I do wish I didn't have to deal with annual reinstalls and perpetually worrying Dassault is going to decide to take it away.

  • 3D CAD software. There are a few options out there (FreeCAD, LibreCAD, etc) and Blender is a thing that exists for more artistic 3D modeling. But they simply don't hold a candle to the features and capabilities of the paid packages, which typically have costs in the 4-to-5-digit range. And I'm not talking the crazy high-end simulation options - those I understand, they're hard - but basic modeling features.

    Hell, I'd even settle for a CAD package that had some solid basic features and had a reasonable purchase cost. Unfortunately the few providers have the industry by the throat, and so your options are "free but terrible" and "you need a mortgage to use this".

  • Okay -

    • 1, that's awesome;
    • 2, for what purpose?
    • 3, is it normal for buildings to have 3-phase in split into different single-phase sections? That feels like you could get some iffy stuff from wildly different loads on the different phases.
  • Before my time, but they tell tales of the "Phantom Shitter". Someone had... issues, physical and/or mental, and would leave streaks of waste both going to and from the bathroom. Very liquid waste. Sometimes stepped in. "Phantom" because initially no one knew who was doing it. They just found the results. Eventually he was found out, sent home for a bit, and then fired when it happened again after he came back.

    Since I worked there: Guy came in for an interview. I don't know if he was already having a bad day or what, but he got upset that his first interviewer wasn't there to greet him at the front door. It escalated, rapidly, leading to threats of violence, an arrest, and a couple of cops searching his car.

  • ...get out of here, Sarkic scum! The Machine endures forever!

  • It doesn't look like they're carrying any weight. If you look at this video of the opening ceremonies, right at the beginning you can see the athletes in the torch not actually touching the level above them.

    Longer versions of the ceremony seem to show moments where the acrobats on lower levels both have their hands out into the air, or are even hanging from the level above them - suggesting any given level is capable of supporting both the weight of those below and above it.

  • Also, people who are just going, "eh, fuck the commerce clause, the states should just do their own thing!" totally forgetting the absolute shitshow this would unleash, both from private companies and conservative states.

  • I once heard greyhounds described as "zoom potatoes", after their exactly two modes of existence.

  • There's a submarine comedy called Down Periscope from the 90s. The story is, of course, absolute ridiculousness (albeit highly entertaining ridiculousness).

    I've repeatedly been told by navy veterans, however, that it comes closest to portraying actual life in the navy - in particular, that virtually every character in the film is someone you can (and likely will) actually encounter in the navy.

  • "But you just like... screw stuff together, right? Cut the basic materials to make the parts, put it together, box it up, ship it out, right?"

    • Someone I legitimately spoke to once. We were talking about assembling TVs.

    I find that people who've never assembled anything more complex than Ikea furniture or something more technical than changed a pipe or switch in their home, tend to think production exists in exactly two levels: Low-tech, hand-tools-at-most labor which can be easily spun up because "anyone can do it", and ultra-high-tech stuff like computer chips which need highly specialized factories, but where a few factories can mostly satisfy nationwide demand.

  • Park, Reverse, Neutral, Drive, Low (gear). The 5 "standard" positions the standard automatic gearshift levers could be set to. Versus the weird stuff like dials or push-buttons that are incredibly hard to operate by muscle-memory if you aren't looking right at them.

  • Similarly, the Great Pyramid of Khafre (the tallest of the 3 greats at Giza) was once clad in a smooth exterior. The outermost cladding was taken by locals needing stone over the years, leaving only its peak still holding the original cladding.

  • Permanently Deleted

  • For what it's worth, Ublock Origin seems the most unaffected by this latest attempt. A lot of people I'm seeing are finding success just by switching from other blockers to UO.

  • The trick with cooling is to ensure you have a smooth flow of air from one part of the case to the other, preferably opposite sides. Make sure your CPU coolers are blowing in the same direction as well.

    It's a little difficult to see from this image, but it looks like you have almost all your fans - intake and outlet - on one end of the case. This could create a big dead zone at the rear of your case. Especially for your GPU, sandwiched between CPU cooler and PSU. What I would do is move one or more of those fans to the rear, make sure front, rear, and CPU fans are all blowing in the same direction, and see if that helps any.

  • Hot Fuzz is one of the better examples in this thread, because it doesn't run solely on ribbing buddy cop films. If you've never seen a buddy cop film in your life, Hot Fuzz is still a perfectly good comedy with some surprisingly touching moments.

    Knowing what it parodies makes it better, of course, but it doesn't look down at them.

  • Worked briefly in the waste management industry. Guns in the garbage were rare, but a problem. Policy was to call the local police to wherever they were found and turn them over. Police would take perfunctory statements from facility staff and review camera footage to verify someone hadn't dumped it and claimed it "found", then take the gun.

    The real problem is we weren't supposed to touch it until police showed up, so the garbage just had to kind of sit there waiting for them.

  • Everyone's telling you why "It doesn't happen". They're not objectively wrong in their answers of how resilient firearms can be, but they're also not answering the question.

    The ultimate answer for a lot is "broken down and recycled". How do they get there, though?

    • A lot come through "buyback" programs, where guns can be turned over to authorities for some nominal reward. These tend to harvest a lot of inoperable weapons, frequently from people who had one but didn't know how to otherwise get rid of them.
    • In states with more lax firearm laws, scrap dealers may accept repairable weapons as scrap metal. In more stringent states, they may only accept them if you've destroy the weapon as /u/[email protected] outlined in the ATF poster.
    • Even in states with strict firearm laws, guns can frequently be turned over to authorities without charges. (CAUTION: Read guides on how to do this, and consult your local laws and policies before treating this as truth. Better yet, consult a legal professional.)
    • In some rare cases, a gun dealer may accept the gun, strip it of useful spare parts, and sell them independently.

    At this point, the gun will be deliberately damaged to render it nonfunctional (if it isn't already) and sent to a scrap metal handler. Metal components will be melted down and reused. Plastic or wood components may be recycled or thrown away.

  • Permanently Deleted

  • On the one hand, I'm glad someone's finally dragging us back into using one of the most potent energy sources available to mankind. On the other, of course it's being driven by the miserable mess called "corporate AI".

    Best case scenario, the infrastructure for new nuclear platforms is available by the time the AI bubble bursts, leaving low-cost systems available for useful power generation. Worst case (or more likely, depending on your point of view): Manufacturers go bust after investing all that money, leaving people yet again mistakenly viewing nuclear as a pointless money pit.