Aesculapius
@Aesculapius@kbin.social
- Comment on New Star Trek Movie Director Is A Fan And Directed The ‘Black Mirror’ Trek Episode “USS Callister” 10 months ago:
The timeline didn't split until the Narada showed up. So, if it's before that moment, it is still the original timeline.
- Comment on Totally not listening to it right now.... 1 year ago:
I liked it when it first came out and now. That base line bullshit they added in S3 on the other hand....
- Comment on I love that SNW kept that detail in the uniform 1 year ago:
The new uniforms have something like that too:
Command
Science
Coms/Engineering - Comment on ‘People have no idea’: How smart devices spy on us and reveal information about our homes 1 year ago:
Security risk is the bigger concern IMHO. These devices are often a security weak point for networks. Putting them on their own wifi network and then isolating that network is critical.
- Comment on Just some fun size comparisons 1 year ago:
It would be nice to see the NX-01 in there
- Comment on There are exactly two types of Star Trek fans 1 year ago:
I really liked it when the show first started. I thought the divergence from the regular formula at the time was a nice change. The theme of the song was also on point for the theme of the show - humanity coming into their own on the galactic stage. I'm in the middle of my first rewatch since the show first aired. I still like it. As for adding a base line to it in season 3....WTF?
- Comment on [deleted] 1 year ago:
Woodworker here. Building with "wet" wood will always result in some wood movement. For exterior applications, wood with around 9-14% moisture is reasonable. For interior applications, more like 6-8%. You can get moisture measuring devices to give you an exact reading.
Green treated wood is not great as most box stores will not allow it to dry properly before putting it up for sale. You can plan for this will corner bracing and such, but it will move on you if too wet. You can find stacks in the lumber yards that are drier than others which can help. Another option for exterior applications is to use kiln dried wood such as cedar and then apply a good sealer to it. If you really want to use the green treated stuff and it's too wet, stack it with shims between the layers and allow it to air dry until you get to the desired moisture. That should minimize the movement after building with it.
There is a good article here.