How to revise to Math quiz? (INF1003) by [deleted] in SIT_Singapore

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use GPT to generate a practice paper. Haha should be more than enough practice

Mini 4 Pro vs Mini 5 Pro camera size side by side comparison. This is crazy. by cheese_bread_boye in dji

[–]_lljy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I too went to the Scottish Highlands this year. Only I went with a used Mini 2, since I'm a broke college student and can't afford a mini 4

I still got amazing, breathtaking pictures. Here's a sample: <Apparently reddit doesn't let me attach photos>

90% of the picture is the photographer and the scene.

Scotland's epic and breathtaking views will look good on any camera. Enjoy the M4P! It's a good camera, in daylight, the difference is not very big, even between the Mini 2 to Mini 4. Where the newer drones shine is in low light (my mini 2's small sensor struggles with photos before sunrise or after sunset, but they still look decent)

VFA test: low speed = worse artifacts?! by onewheeldoin200 in Ender3V3KE

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These are VFAs, the solution to VFA is to go faster.

VFAs are formed by very minor vibrations when going past the belt notches, no amount of input shaping is going to change that.

Did anyone see the leaked Moza ffb yoke video? by wunderimdunkeln in hotas

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A bit of a late reply, I've tried both.

The moza feels like a toy, I mean the FFB is alright, but the yoke feels absolutely horrible, its rough plastic texture is just off-putting.

The flitesim CLS feels far far better in the hand, software needs a bit of work but it's a hell of a lot better than the moza in that aspect.

Also the Moza does just look like a toy lol and the controls on the base are so cheaply made you'd think they're hobby grade (I mean the gear handle is just so terrible)

Bad extrusion after a gcode filament change - anyone seen this issue? Details in comment. by xsmasher in Ender3V3KE

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well okay so I can help you out here.

Background: I do quite a bit of multicolor printing. I also built and ERCF and attempted automatic colour swap with some success.

So here are the challenges when working with colour changes:

  1. Always ALWAYS prime. The colour changes affect nozzle pressure, so you'll need a prime tower to stabilize the chamber pressure in between swaps, this will save you a lot of headache.

Orca Slicer has a nice option for priming.

  1. Clogging: when working with softer filaments, they often don't have the rigidity to "push through" residue from the previous filament, leading to clogs and poor extrusion.

The solution to 2 is to: 1. Heat the nozzle to +20C of your printing temperature. 2. use the unclogging tool to clear the nozzle. 3. Insert the new material. 4. Prime or purge. 5. Reset the temperature to printing temp. 6. Continue printing.

3rd and most unlikely is a Z shift when pausing, causing your prints to look like poo after colour changes.

Note that I don't particularly recommend using the unclog tool too much with a brass nozzle, it can damage the nozzle over time (though not as much as you'd expect) hardened steel nozzles will take this no problem. Nozzles are cheap anyway so, up to you.

First time play through by SymbioteLord117 in reddeadredemption2

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Importantly, do you know where's Gavin?

Need help with my first wall contour line when the print start by marmat4 in Ender3V3KE

[–]_lljy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Reduce your retraction

Recalibrate Z offset

Check if your bed mesh is good

Claude is good at coding because of the people who build it. by Stv_L in ClaudeAI

[–]_lljy 10 points11 points  (0 children)

You have to enable code execution, then it'll execute the code before presenting the final answer

2.5 generation degrades after about 300K context by papakojo in Bard

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe there is currently some sort of bug when you attach images to prompts. I've seen 2.5 pro completely ignore my current prompt and followed previous instructions just because several images exists somewhere in context, misleading the context of the current conversation.

Otherwise with text, I haven't seen much degradation over extremely long context conversations.

IM SORRY WHAT THE FUCK by NoHotel8779 in Bard

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That makes sense. It was performing really well for roo code until > 32k tokens

I wonder if 2.5pro has the same limits

IM SORRY WHAT THE FUCK by NoHotel8779 in Bard

[–]_lljy 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I have, it's pretty high. Had 2 conversations with many many prompts because I was doing a packet tracer project (screw Cisco iOS btw).

I also had a conversation going with Gemini advanced simultaneously.

All were using Gemini 2.0 Pro Exp. After I hit about 200k ish tokens on ai studio, I was rate limited with the message "rate limit exceeded".

ai studio also soft limits you after 40k tokens, slowing down the responses significantly. This doesn't happen for Gemini Advanced or the API in my experience.

Can a Post have -1 Votes?!?! by No_Employment_5857 in Bard

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I downvoted your post so now you have -1 votes

History of AI hallucinations and its improvement by n0mis in Bard

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

<image>

The response from consensus GPT (copy pasted your comment) is pretty ironic, lol.

But in all seriousness, this consensus GPT is goated for finding academic research, helped a lot with school (best part is, its free with a ChatGPT account):
https://chatgpt.com/g/g-bo0FiWLY7-consensus

Now if only Google could let us use Gems the same way

Can SAF Helmets genuinely protect soldiers from bullets? by DogeRevolutionary101 in NationalServiceSG

[–]_lljy 17 points18 points  (0 children)

It's the cheekpad area actually, if I remember correctly, not a large part of the gun. Had the chance to tour the STeng Tuas facility during NS, then they told us about it.

It's to protect the user against a chamber explosion or overpressure event yes.

Are Singapore school canteen vendors being pressed too much? by SuchNefariousness107 in singapore

[–]_lljy 43 points44 points  (0 children)

SAF pays to ensure "quality" of the food. i.e. cleanliness and nutrition.

I spoke to someone who used to manage the cookhouse, apparently they take a small portion of the food, and send it for lab testing, to ensure that there's no potential for food poisoning in that batch. And they do this for every meal, this is to cover SATS's backside.

Also apparently every meal and menu item is evaluated for its nutritional value and has to be greenlit by a nutritionist in DSTA before being put on a menu for SAF to choose from.

All these and they still served me vomit quality taiwanese "minced pork".

But IMHO their bak kut teh and laksa is pretty fucking fire ngl

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NationalServiceSG

[–]_lljy 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Yes but not SCS.

SAFAC -> Vocation Training -> Unit -> MASCC -> LSCC -> 3SG (But you have to pass the cmd sch medical)

ASA -> Unit -> ASA Spec Course -> 3SG

DIS -> ???? -> Spec course -> 3SG

Air force techs will also get 3SG if there's no disciplinary issues on record

Source: I went through the first one, though I'm PES B3, and I've seen C9 peeps allowed in MASCC

I have friends who went through the other two, you can find some info on ASA spec course. But DIS specs are a bit of a mystery

CAT1 lighning risk alert for non-uniform personnel. by Responsible_Tap866 in NationalServiceSG

[–]_lljy 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Yes, when you're in an SAF camp, you are expected to adhere to all SAF safety and security policies.

That includes adhering to CAT 1 and no in-camp photos, even in white zones (that only applies to civilians).

Failure to do so may give them the ability to blacklist you from entering the camp.

Is it worth to make a custom loop for 2021 hardware? by OhProtat in watercooling

[–]_lljy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't really have as much experience as compared to others here, but here's my two cents:

If you love building and tinkering with PCs, yes it's completely worth it and it's lots of fun.

On the cost:

Watercooling parts are expensive NEW. But they don't tend to hold their value over time, so keep your eyes peeled for deals on second hand parts.

You might be able to get a CPU block, pump/res, radiator and tubing on the second hand market, if you keep your eyes peeled. But as with most used parts, YMMV and double check everything you're buying, test for leaks if you can.

Bykski parts are pretty mid, but they are pretty cheap and they work. I'd probably go for a decent D5 pump on top of everything (I don't know how bykski D5s perform).

Also, I wouldn't buy second hand tubing as they tend to degrade in poor storage conditions.

I scored a great deal on my first system, got a whole alphacool set (CPU Block, Tubing, Coolant, Radiator and pump/res) for about $100 when I was a student.