

I have a minisforum v3 that I’m not using - just don’t love the surface style form factor. I’m willing to sell it for a good price if anyone is interested. Based in USA. Feel free to DM me
I have a minisforum v3 that I’m not using - just don’t love the surface style form factor. I’m willing to sell it for a good price if anyone is interested. Based in USA. Feel free to DM me
Avoid lenovo. Their build quality went to crap and they’re easily the least repairable laptop on the market these days.
I’ve had to repair 4 lenovos within the last few years. Cheap parts and the laptops all had their keyboards plastic rivited to the top shell of the chassis, making it impossible to replace without buying a new chassis. One of the laptops had to have two motherboard replacements before it was usable.
Their all-in-one doesn’t have a frame around the LCD panel, and they didn’t put access doors in the back panel. So if you want to upgrade the ram or ssd you have a 70% chance of breaking the screen.
If you’re only doing a VM or two, I’d get rid of proxmox and run truenas directly. It’s gotten better for VMs.
Also make sure you read up on the ecc requirements for truenas if you’re not using ecc ram
Iirc the watches ship from China, international buyers won’t get hit with us terrifs
Great advice. Framework is the best choice if you can afford it. Seconded your opinions on Lenovo. They’re absolute trash now.
Onshape has a free tier, though all the cad files you make in it are publically available. That being said, it’s easy to use and, since it’s browser based, completely comparable with linux
Some of the installs can be a little weird, but I’ve never had anything that I couldn’t get running. Vscode has an install for tumbleweed https://code.visualstudio.com/Download
The major “issue” is the package names are different between Debian and tumbleweed, so if you’re installing software from github that isn’t directly provided by suse/appimage/flatpak then a lot of times you’ll need to install the dependencies manually by finding the corresponding packages (since most github repositories have directions for Debian/Ubuntu and not suse)
Or you could just use distrobox
I’ll +1 tumbleweed. Rolling and stable, it’s been great
Boy I’ve been following this for a little bit and I’m not sure if they can reach that goal. $1400 is a huge amount for a phone, let alone one that is only WiFi 5, with no full prototype or software usability guarantee, from a company that’s never gone to market. It’s going to be a very hard sell
Which slicer are you using? You can try setting ironing to on and the wall generator to arachne
Oh man the extension for merging nodes is going to be fantastic. A few weeks ago I was using inkscape to clean up some dxf drawings I exported from some CAD models. Each line segment was just overlapping and not actually connected. I had to come up with some convoluted work flow to select and merge the nodes manually. Super excited that this exists now
I had no idea that (open)SUSE was so security minded in their packaging. It makes sense in retrospec. It sucks they didn’t catch this earlier, but this response makes me happy to use tumbleweed
Yeah he really didn’t handle it well
Edit:
Here’s a link to the thread.
https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/9
I’ll second tumbleweed. I use it on 4 separate devices and its rarely given me any issues. If it does, it has built-in recovery snapshots - it takes 30 seconds to roll back a bad update.
They did it. Those crazy bastards actually did it
Oh this looks very useful for organizing datasheets and dev references, will definitely give this a shot. Thanks and nice work!
New thinkpads are trash unfortunately. Lenovo really cheaped out on their build quality. I’ve had to fix multiple lenovo laptops and one of their all-in-ones and the corners they cut made the repairs either impossible or extremely difficult.
One new ideapad had to go back to them twice with motherboard issues.
Replacing the keyboard is impossible, you need to replace the whole front panel of the case becuase the keyboard is plastic rivited in place.
The all-in-one started as a simple ram and storage upgrade, but in order to do that the whole back panel needs to come off. Its snapped on but the LCD panel itself doesn’t have any subframe around it, so when opening the back panel theres a very high chance of you cracking the display.
New thinkpads are trash unfortunately. Lenovo really cheaped out on their build quality. I’ve had to fix multiple lenovo laptops and one of their all-in-ones and the corners they cut made the repairs either impossible or extremely difficult.
One new ideapad had to go back to them twice with motherboard issues.
Replacing the keyboard is impossible, you need to replace the whole front panel of the case becuase the keyboard is plastic rivited in place.
The all-in-one started as a simple ram and storage upgrade, but in order to do that the whole back panel needs to come off. Its snapped on but the LCD panel itself doesn’t have any subframe around it, so when opening the back panel theres a very high chance of you cracking the display.
https://www.squid-cache.org/ Should work too I think
So I think there were a few issues.