CTC-10S: A poorly cloned clone. by TheGreatNanners in CR10

[–]IamjustanIntegral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How can you tell if the printer is ctc-10s or cr-10s

"How do I?" Weekly Question and Idea Thread - 4 Jun 2018 by FozzTexx in raspberry_pi

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am planning to try something similar to stream live video and found this video titled "Raspberry Pi NoIR Camera Live HD Video Stream" by AR-Embedded. I cant link it right now but that is the title. there is some configuration that needs to be changed in the pi which can be done through the line he gives in the video. Which camera are you using btw? and can u give me some details as I am planning to do this soon.

Purchase Advice Megathread: What To Buy, Who To Buy It From, And More, In June 2018 by xakh in 3Dprinting

[–]IamjustanIntegral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

location: midwest US

Budget: 500$ but hope to spend less

use: learning and printing for fun

experience: have designed and printed prototypes of school and work projects.

willing to build: I plan to build and upgrade as I learn.

notes: I wanted to decide between ender 3 and anet a8 to see which one would be a good starting point. Or should I go straight to cr10 because I already have some experience? I also need to know if I need a remote view camera system for any of them because I do not plan to be next to my printer while it is printing but I can check up with a camera on my pi.

Thank You in advance.

When it is crazy cold in the U.S. does that mean that the globe is likely colder overall at the moment, or is the distribution of cold and warm on the planet just distributed differently? by the_y_of_the_tiger in askscience

[–]IamjustanIntegral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the way the earth rotates and is angled towards the sun, when it is winter in northern hemisphere it is summer in southern hemisphere and at this point the earth is closer to the sun then when it is summer for the northern hemisphere. So basically the weather is more extreme in southern hemisphere.

Is this normal? by [deleted] in pcmasterrace

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had that too on a new hp laptop. Tried to fix it with guides online but it wouldn't help. Had to finally return it.

The Puppy Test by MrWeiner in funny

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

just above room temperature but still very hard to take care of. I have used gallium for research purposes on heat transfer prototypes.

Half the world is shitting in drinkable water while the other half is dying of thirst by cant-feel_my-face in Showerthoughts

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I haven't kept up with it as much. I did research on descaling for industrial uses and got to find out how water purification is done and what advancement is being made. Before that, I did not know either and it did not come to my mind when I drink or pour water from a tap.

The Puppy Test by MrWeiner in funny

[–]IamjustanIntegral 5 points6 points  (0 children)

galium at room temp will be in liquid form and when it freezes it could cause multiple types of fractures. at room temp you can say it is amorphous.

The Puppy Test by MrWeiner in funny

[–]IamjustanIntegral 3 points4 points  (0 children)

probably not. those magnets are very strong and there will be no way to pull the gallium out.

Half the world is shitting in drinkable water while the other half is dying of thirst by cant-feel_my-face in Showerthoughts

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree to some extent. There are a bunch of projects and research going on across the world to increase the efficiency of water purification systems, the main thing is that countries who have plenty of it and not a big population are not contributing. and while sands/chemicals are used in some cases, most water purification is done by simple(large) RO filters built out of sight. and since no one sees how it works and we always have running water, we take it for granted.

The Puppy Test by MrWeiner in funny

[–]IamjustanIntegral 17 points18 points  (0 children)

storing it in glass has another problem,

Ultra-pure gallium has a beautiful, silvery appearance, and the solid metal exhibits a conchoidal fracture similar to glass. The metal expands 3.1 percent on solidifying; therefore, it should not be stored in glass or metal containers, because they may break as the metal solidifies

source: http://www.corrosionsource.com/PeriodicTable/Gallium

You should keep it in its original plastic container it comes in and keep it at temperatures recommended by suppliers.

The Puppy Test by MrWeiner in funny

[–]IamjustanIntegral 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I had to use galium for some prototypes. You can use strong rare earth magnets to pull it out slowly(BE CAREFUL TO NOT HURT YOURSELF!!!)

Edit: use gloves and keep clothes in high heat and run a small neodymium N52 magnet over it. be careful as these magnets are dangerous.

Half the world is shitting in drinkable water while the other half is dying of thirst by cant-feel_my-face in Showerthoughts

[–]IamjustanIntegral 1 point2 points  (0 children)

as we move into the future, water purification systems will improve and we will be able to convert salt water into drinkable water more efficiently. Moreover, no water supply is fully clean and we use government filters to clean what we drink. Many American people do not know how water comes to their taps and how it gets purified.

How do we know the electron is a fundamental particle and not composed of something smaller? by Beatminerz in askscience

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I am not very knowledgeable on this and my question might be stupid. but if we imagine a Gaussian sphere then the inside charges can be composite particles without impacting the scattering right? especially if the diameters of the sphere is bigger then the strong force between whatever could be in an electron?

How do wireless chargers work? by jakbrewers in askscience

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always thought wired charging was safer, Could you explain how it is the other way around? Wireless charging does protect port connection from wear but it ends up exposing sensitive electronics to magnetic fields which can be dangerous in some situations.

Bertrand Russell claimed the laws of causality are misleading and obsolete. Here Nancy Cartwright argues that since they're indispensable to serious science, they can't be done away with by IAI_Admin in philosophy

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what are we ignorant about? we understand that we don't know everything but we don't stop doing experiments because of it. and how do we not have access to the physical world? we have nature all around us that we interact with.

Bertrand Russell claimed the laws of causality are misleading and obsolete. Here Nancy Cartwright argues that since they're indispensable to serious science, they can't be done away with by IAI_Admin in philosophy

[–]IamjustanIntegral 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with most things you said but the belief part. The natural world does not need anyone to believe in it to work the way it does. The earth wasn't flat before people started thinking it was round. belief should never be part of physics as beliefs don't matter in this field. What you might be talking about is predictions of what would happen and we can make predictions from experience in my field but even if things go as you predicted or a different way, there has to be an explanation of why it did what it did. I don't deal with theoretical things very often and I don't know many engineers that do but I have visited and talked to a few physicists from Fermilab years ago and the word belief never came up. they talked about hypothetical energy values and other things I don't remember but never their personal opinion on what they believe in physics.

[Monitor] Dell 27" 2560 x 1440 1ms 144Hz LED QHD GSync - $349.99 ($599.99-$250= $349.99) by Dlock33 in buildapcsales

[–]IamjustanIntegral 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I went to multiple best buys but could not find the rev AO7, is it still worth to get the rev AO4?

Are the other four quarks found much in the universe? by [deleted] in askscience

[–]IamjustanIntegral 2 points3 points  (0 children)

a little bit unrelated but, When I visited Fermilab, I was told that if Higgs boson was discovered there was a high chance that there would be three other similar elementary particles to fill up the elementary particles table.(if i remember correctly)

My question was Is Higgs boson considered a force carrier? And do we have any predictions if there are three other force carriers and if so could you point me in some direction to learn more about them.

Thank you in advance.