remotelove
@remotelove@lemmy.world
- Comment on Shrooms - A place to discuss the growing, hunting, and the experience of magical fungi. 1 year ago:
Shrooms are becoming decriminalized and even legalized across the US now. It’s a shame that the admins banned the community at all on lemmy.world. By their logic, they should also ban marijuana related communities. ItS sTiLl iLleGal!!!
Psilocybin is a very interesting and useful chemical and it is just stupid for it to be censored. What do those admins wish to accomplish? Shhhhhhh! Don’t talk about something that may help with mental disorders or even PTSD. Mushroom bad!
Of all the good things that lemmy.world admins do, this is ranks as one of the dumbest and short sighted.
- Comment on Where are you? Can you move? 1 year ago:
These are questions you should ponder after a nice healthy dose of psilocybin. You can be just about anywhere you want to be and pick what works for you.
- Comment on Japan Earthquake Alert App Says Sayonara to X - Unseen Japan 1 year ago:
Once the service stops using Twitter for something else, it could be considered a full “switch” I suppose.
- Comment on Old PC as Server 1 year ago:
Old hardware is awesome to reuse most of the time but it’s not nearly as efficient as our hardware today.
It’s probably good to just properly recycle the old gear and spend $200 on a mini-PC from Amazon that has three times the power all while using less electricity.
I usually completely tear down old equipment into is raw materials, the best I can. It’s less likely to be shipped off to another country for uncontrolled destruction and I get more money back for the materials.
- Comment on I can hear it clearly 1 year ago:
- Comment on Verizon Fails Again, Shutters Attempted Zoom Alternative BlueJeans After Paying $400 Million For It 1 year ago:
They are just trying to emulate Google.
- Comment on Email server hosting 1 year ago:
I will echo many others here: It’s going to be rough getting good deliveries. While you are planning on running a proxy, that is basically the same as running an open port where your server is. While it may seem to be a good idea to send email from a random AWS address, it really isn’t. Unless you are behind an IP that is specifically trusted as an email source, your traffic has a higher probability of getting dropped. (Many dynamic IP ranges for home internet connections are marked as invalid or untrusted sources, btw.)
Additionally, email servers are a hot commodity, especially if they are not blocked (yet) by the larger filter providers. All it takes is one or two reports or a poorly configured firewall/IDS to auto-trigger a submission of your IP address as “bad”. By hot commodity, I mean you are going to get fuck tons of vulnerability scans. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s super annoying.
If I was operating as a Jr. Security Analyst again and saw and sus traffic coming from your address, I would submit a block and not think twice about it. Hell, most of those types of blocks are automated anyway.
However, if you do set one up and all is golden, great! It’s worth the experience but something I won’t ever do again. (Yes I did run my own email server before.)
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
I added another version today that has a 2mm ring without the chamfer, btw.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
They sit 3mm proud. This is not an issue if they are hidden, me thinks. However, you should be able to not use the support ring if it is an issue. (I’ll modify a design today in attempt to reduce the amount it sticks out.)
Also, these are intended to be extremely secure and almost permanent. If you want it flush, you can probably pound it in a little more with a hammer. If not, leave it proud and it gives you a little meat to pull it out of the wall later.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
Thank you.
Isn’t it really cool that some of the best engineering projects leverage extreme simplicity? I am not saying that I am a grand architect or anything like that, but this simple project is a perfect example of why most people want to learn 3D printing.
After thousands of dollars were spent on 3D printers, rolls of filament and replacement parts with hundreds of hours dedicated to learn about printers and CAD, it all just boiled down to being able to design and print a silly drywall anchor on a whim.
Ain’t this hobby glorious? :)
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
Aww, thank you! I can be a sarcastic ass sometimes, but such is life. Regardless, it’s fun to design and share things. That reminds me… I included the .f3d file with this design but I forgot to add a .step. I’ll add that and some clearer dimensions for it tomorrow.
Lemmy just needs all the love it can get and interactions are super critical for that. After being on Reddit for over 12 years, it’s great to be part of something new.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
Thanks for comment!
I tried a few anchors that were already out there all of them broke at the layer lines easily with PLA. Granted PETG would probably have mitigated that issue, but I didn’t want to change filaments.
The toggle anchor would be fun to design, but designing a hinge that would work universally across many printers and filaments would be a challenge, for sure. Cheers!
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
It can, yes. However, it is only by 3mm. The print orientation is the way it is so that it can survive a hammer and some love taps. (I already tested that, btw.) Additionally, I wanted some extra meat on it for easy removal later and it may be hidden, depending on your application.
In theory, you don’t need the support ring if the hole you drill in your drywall is a perfect fit. I have traditionally drilled my drywall holes a hair small for these kinds of mounts, so if you do that, not using the ring may work. Or not.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
It linked just fine! I think I can post to kbin via lemmy. Not sure…
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
Eeeeyyy! I just found the stud.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
You can yell at me all you want! If you need a hug, I can get you one of those as well, no charge.
I am using some of the mounts now for some pictures, but I can say they are extremely stout, at least the way I printed them. You have to use a hammer to tap them in the last little bit so it doesn’t spin. They survived some fairly hard love taps, and once the screw was in, they aren’t moving.
Your personal experience may be different.
- Comment on Honeycomb Tool Wall is Coming Along 1 year ago:
Oh awesome! I just saw this design on Printables today and really wanted to see it in action before I committed to the print. Thanks for posting.
Are there any print or build issues that I need to take note of, or is it as good of a design as it looks like?
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
They expand quite a bit and the little tabs are intended to dig into the drywall to keep the assembly from rotating while it the screw is set.
I suppose you could cut the little tabs off and not use the ring and it would still work. It may be problematic since the main anchor bit is split in half.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
Cool, I’ll add better details, for sure!
Fyi, it should work for screws with a diameter of ~3.5mm. As long as you can get the screw to self tap its own threads, you should be OK.
Everything should be a very tight fit, when all is said and done. I have to press the anchor bits into the cap by pressing the assembly together hard on my desk.
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
You’re welcome! I was too lazy to run to the store. ;)
- Comment on I designed a printable drywall mount. 1 year ago:
It’s probably limited to the thickness of the drywall. All I needed was a lightweight shelf and maybe a picture or two. I would have to test it to get some real numbers.
- Submitted 1 year ago to 3dprinting@lemmy.world | 32 comments
- Comment on Beijing Superconductor (LK-99) Levitation Video Author Admits Fraud, Takes it Down 1 year ago:
So your saying that the person who sold me my alchemist degree and the secret formula was full of shit? Damn.
- Comment on Beijing Superconductor (LK-99) Levitation Video Author Admits Fraud, Takes it Down 1 year ago:
I should release my paper about how I turned lead into gold. Nobody would care about that one, right?
- Comment on Do posts from instances that don't allow downvotes have an unfair advantage? 1 year ago:
I think there should be an option (unless there is) for mods to turn off (or hide) voting as needed. That might be an effective way to cancel any downvote brigades. Lemmy really doesn’t have the population for mass vote manipulation now, but it will soon enough.
Hiding all votes can also help mitigate some superficial bias, but not all. I believe that if a person sees a comment with a few dozen downvotes first, they tend not to read the post objectively. After being on Reddit for such a long time (12 years or so), I found that it was super easy to manipulate voting trends if I caught a post or comment at just the right time.
Hiding only downvotes is just silly though. Some register of public opinion, positive or negative, still has its uses, IMHO.
- Comment on blindsided lmao 1 year ago:
- Comment on Movies vs life 1 year ago:
It is best paired with this: hackertyper.net
- Comment on If Lemmy code is written by people who love to code, Lemmy marketing can be made by people who like to market 1 year ago:
Marketing can be done by anyone. :) All it takes is a little passion and excitement when telling someone else about something you enjoy.
Professional marketers can bring lots of skills to the table but nothing beats a good old fashioned testimonial.
- Comment on ‘Rick and Morty’ Team Gives Update on Recasting Process Following Justin Roiland’s Dismissal 1 year ago:
Justin’s humor was unique but was really dry when he was in his own. The other writers really brought his voice to life, IMHO. On that note, I think he was only a writer on one or two episodes of R&M.