Yep, but I made mine first 😬 I believe we were both inspired by the work of Karakurist.
Yep, but I made mine first 😬 I believe we were both inspired by the work of Karakurist.
Yes, absolutely. Just needs one motor per digit.
The video exagerates it a bit. But it is audible. Of course the clock will only move once a minute.
It is digital because it has digits instead of pointers. It is also digital in the sense that it has discrete states.
that will make some people immensely rich
Not sure what this means. Most satelites make everyone a little bit richer (weather, GPS, communication satelites).
it’s up to the cooperation of countries to research, mitigate, and control it
I would argue that companies SpaceX have a lot to lose from space debris. If space becomes inaccessible, they can’t do any business. They do a lot to mitigate space debris (especially with Starlink), and this is rational because too much space debris threatens their mission.
The political ideas you can find on Reddit are much more diverse. There is usually at least some pushback against some of the most deranged statements.
That’s kind of the point. There was a time in the 2010s when each new device could do something that they couldn’t previously do. But it seems like the market has figured out what people want from their phones and that’s what they are getting now.
In the cases you describe it should fail by ruining the print, not the build plate though. If there is something between the nozzle and the plate, it will be too far away from it after calibration, not too close.
There is no snapping, but the geneva drive will stay locked in position when it is not moving. The thing that I haven’t figured out is how to get the 3 to go back to 0 after 23:59, it needs to skip the numbers 4 to 9.
I’m testing a geneva drive (you can see it in the front in the photo), that should allow me to reduce the number of motors even further. I think I can get it down to two, maybe even one.
This video was the inspiration for my project!
Yes! 🤓
I like using AntennaPod for podcasts and Spotify for music.
The NPR article says the opposite of the headline.
By contrast, the new study found that in a third of societies for which there is data, the women hunt large game. In other words, they do go after the kind of big mammals associated with the stereotype of male hunters.
Yes, women hunted sometimes, but in 40 of the 60 societies they looked at, women didn’t participate in big game hunting at all. In the remaining third, they did find at least one female hunter, but they don’t say what the ratio is.
It doesn’t make sense for Lemmy (or Mastodon) to send your IP to other instances. Without that IP, all they have is your username. They can’t really track you based on just the username.
What a wild conspiracy theory.
Legally, they can’t collect and process any of the data unless you accepted a contract with them. Just by sending an upvote or a comment to their instance, you don’t agree to any of this.
And if they choose to ignore the law and just do it anyway, they still can’t, because all they have is the data that your instance sends them. They don’t have your geo-location, device Id, etc.
Interesting. It seems that Lemmy can see Mastodon users and send private messages to them. And I believe Mastodon users can create Lemmy posts, so potentially Threads users could do that too once Meta enables two-way communication.
I got that idea from this design.