Put a page on your website saying that scrapping your website costs [insert amount] and block the bots otherwise.
Put a page on your website saying that scrapping your website costs [insert amount] and block the bots otherwise.
Damn, would love it in my native language. From experience, whenever I buy a game in English, I’m the only one who wants to play it.
Stop projecting, maybe? No, I’m not forced. But I want to, because I refuse to pay any more money to such a shitty company. I paid for the product, now I’m gonna use it the way I want to.
Price is not my reason for pirating. Seriously, people are different from you, stop assuming that everyone has the same motivation as you do.
I mean, who doesn’t? But nah, I just don’t want to pay a company that does as much horrible stuff as Nintendo does. That pretty much means I own an expensive paperweight which I’m not a huge fan of as well. So I decided it’s gonna be a pirating only console.
I don’t like the way Nintendo destroys people’s lives just because they “lost” a few dollars.
So it will become a MIG switch only system, right? Also, how does one get caught? I’m not into online games in general, so I wouldn’t be playing any multiplayer games. Is the simple fact that the game’s certificate was used on multiple devices simultaneously enough to flag the device?
I can see a few useful use-cases, mainly deleting unwanted stuff / people from a photo.
Yep, it should fix the issue. Though I still have no idea what caused it. But well, sometimes it really is as simple as updating your dependencies.
It’s broken for Lemmy versions newer than 0.19.3, or is it broken even for you even on 0.19.3?
That’s most likely because the code hasn’t been updated to work with 0.19.4, let alone 0.19.5. Until I get around to fix that (which might be a while, I don’t have much time for my side projects lately), I suggest using it with an account from an instance that’s on 0.19.3 (feel free to use lemmings.world).
Done!
I did, but it seems I cannot add them as a mod.
Okay, that’s next level.
Cries in AMS Lite.
Settings, mostly. The layering is always there, but how visible it is depends on the layer height. Both the Depresso and Spyro were made with 0.2mm layer height, which is a good compromise between looks-good/prints-fast. If you want something that looks really nice, you’d go to 0.08mm layer height (the lowest this particular printer can go with this particular nozzle size). The print would take around 2.5 times longer with 0.08mm layer height.
Material also affects this, but PLA generally is the easiest to print with and looks among the best visually. If the print speed were really high it would affect it as well, but it was well under the maximum speeds.
This is a FDM printer which basically lays one layer of heated plastic over another, there are also SLA printers which can go much lower layer heights and thus the prints are visually much better, though use-case of such printers are limited to pretty looking pieces, you can’t really make anything functional with them.
Edit: If you want the prints to look really great, you’re gonna have to do some post-processing anyway, like sanding down the uglier parts and painting it with some acrylic paint. That way you avoid the visible layers as well.
Bambu Lab A1 and mostly PLA for material (aka the easiest one to print).
When I need something flexible, I use some TPU. And when I need something that will hold for a long time, I use PETG.
I make all kinds of stuff, mostly toys and household items, sometimes I design something myself (generally the stuff that’s meant to be useful, not pretty), sometimes I use models other people created.
Currently I’m printing a puzzle for kids.
Edit: a recent print of mine:
No problem!
Welcome! Both to Lemmy and lemmings.world!
Under GDPR they can’t use it, unless you give them consent. They obviously do, but they can’t be too obvious, otherwise they’d have to pay huge fines again.
I did this with a suitcase lock once, luckily only 3 digits. The code was 587. I remembered the code at around 540.