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Strangely I can't get to this domain. We have ZScaler at work with DGA Blocking enabled and it prevents me from loading the page.


Most likely caused by the .select TLD.


Fuzzy skin finish might also get you pretty close along with a wood PLA. They can do both wall and top layer fuzzy skin now.


You don't need wood PLA, I have a Bambu matte ecru PLA and with fuzzy skin it looks almost exactly like this.


I'm on Mounjaro for T2D, previously on Ozempic. Besides the weight loss and the blood sugar control it also eliminated my IBS as well. Before the drug certain foods, especially nuts would cause excruciating digestive issues. I can now eat them without worry. It's been amazing.


I 100% know what you mean. I went through a phase where I'd measure out 3 ounces of cashews and have that as a lunch because it was fast, and measuring meant I wasn't taking in too many calories. Always irritated my gut though, anything high in fat did it.

I don't do that on GLP-1s, partially because fat doesn't immediately send me to the bathroom anymore, but also partially because I'm not drawn to high fat meals anymore. Except when thc is involved and then some ice cream might happen.


I think it's doable with a parametric design in Fusion but it is definitely more work up-front or re-work after you have a working version. Getting a well parameterized and set of constrained sketches can be a time consuming process since I don't do it every day. It's probably the part I've struggled with the most in making 3D printable designs (I'm not OP but design cosplay props for my kids) since I don't always know what I want the final dimensions to be.


And a parametric design requires you to buy the commercial Fusion license.


No it doesn't, unless you mean some more advanced parametric features that just the basic parameter driven modelling.


We just completed the switch to Rancher where I work. 1200ish engineers, mostly on Macs. So far it's worked out pretty well..fewer hiccups than I expected.


Does it use the same "containers are really just running in a Linux VM" approach as Docker Desktop on macOS?


unless you run osx on a Linux kernel, it will always be so.

not a personal attack on you, but it blows my mind how clueless the current generation of developers become after the docker phase.


personal attack or not, you could have just left that last bit off and had a good comment.

There's always been a mythos of a true developer. Here's a rant from 1983 about how real programmers don't use Pascal. https://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/real.programmers.html

Kids these days...


I don't understand this comment on any level.

Containers will only ever be on a linux kernel or VM? Never natively on ANY other OS? Only Linux containers exist?

Developers were more clueful about containers before Docker made them wildly popular?


“Only Linux containers exist?“

In practice, yes.


Windows containers absolutely exist in practice.


Yeah, but how often are they needed?


My last job we ran very significant public workloads on windows containers. I don’t know the number of requests but it’s a multi million user application all around the world.


Interesting; I may be biased because I've been involved in helping teams containerize as part of a cloud migration and only one or two cases has there been a real 'need', basically for running a Windows service that was eventually retired in favour of a lambda triggered by consuming a message in a queue.


We were waaaaay too big to fit in lambda layers. Our containers were 8GB when I left, and that was using all sorts of tricks on the host infra to share data between running containers.

The root of the problem was we had third party tools which were windows only.


> unless you run osx on a Linux kernel, it will always be so

Linux is not the only OS that has container like things. FreeBSD had jails years earlier, Solaris had something else which I don't remember any more, and for all I know macOS may have their own native equivalent as well.

Bear in mind that Apple introduced an official hypervisor framework a few releases ago, so they could be doing something similar for containers. It wouldn't be a bad idea. :)


This may be a terminology thing but as a T2 I will always carry that diagnosis. However, mine is in remission because I manage it through medication/diet.

My doctor and I have talked about trying to see if I can drop the medications and still stay in remission but I'll still be a T2 patient.

Also, not all T2s can manage just through a ketogenic diet.


Thanks for your perspective, and congrats on the lookout to not even take meds anymore. Yea didn't want to imply that the ketogenic diet would work for everybody with T2. And I can see how you'd say you'll always be T2 as you will want to keep watching your diet even if you didn't take medication anymore.


I think it's only going to get worse as the LLMs get just that much better that people stop thinking more critically about what they generate. Right now I think many people still verify or read through the results to make sure they sound right. What happens when people get lulled into complacency and then it really goes off on a bender.


Nothing will have changed. How many times have you seen HN comments from people that never read the article? How many times have you read flat out lies on Reddit? The last 40 years of of cable news have banked on this theory. At least the last 80 years of American politics as well. There’s no degradation of critical thinking, either. It’s just a cohort that does it and a cohort that doesn’t. For all of time.


IMO future is government neutering of anything related to safety, physical world or food...


From my limited vantage point (in-laws) this is normal in the Filipino culture. My wife and I moved away from her parents so we didn't do this but her sister's kids were probably a 70/30 split in being at the grandparents' house. Her cousin's kids were the same. In fact, many of them would send the kids to the Philippines for months at a time where the grandparents lived to be raised by them. It felt really odd to me at first but that's more because it wasn't how I was raised plus I didn't have any grandparents that were still alive when I grew up.


This could almost be me. The main difference is my "server" is an off-lease Dell Micro PC that I maxed out the RAM on running ProxMox with a mix of VMs with everything stored on a Synology NAS all sitting in my basement office closet. I have tailscale setup so I can access it remotely.


I see this a lot with certain home labs. A ton of ram for vms. Why not just run on the metal?


Easier to mess with or reinstall OS remotely if you're not sitting in front of it, I'd imagine. Also can be easier to back up the whole system or take a snapshot of the system state, or nuke it and start over if you really screw it up.

I've dabbled with VMs for test environments but generally just install on bare metal.


I have about a dozen VMs running on a couple of large-ish servers (16 cores, 128 gigs RAM, 8 TB storage) Many of these are small, experimental environments (8 gigs RAM max, few hundred gigs storage) Running all those on metal would be expensive and annoying.


While I do use the AMS for multi-color prints, it's actually more useful to me because I can keep four filaments loaded at any time and it's easier to swap filaments out of the AMS that from behind the printer. I try to avoid prints with a ton of color changes just because of how much it slows down prints and the amount of waste it generates.

If the Prusa XL wasn't so expensive for 5 toolheads I'd get that since its' much faster for filament switches and the minimal amount of waste it generates.


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