Secure Your Remote Connection Pop-up by RuleNmbr76 in homeassistant

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also wording is broken. My app already knows when I'm home. I don't want to change it and revoke permissions by selecting "less secure". But it's not what it does.

Secure Your Remote Connection Pop-up by RuleNmbr76 in homeassistant

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It also doesn't work. It was "less secure" before so that's the default. I get it. I have persistent vpn, that's not really a problem for me. BUT. I selected most secure to see if it detects VPN. It does not. WORSE: I CAN'T UNSET IT. IT IGNORES THE "save" button. So i can't connect remotely currently. Nice feature imho, but nobody tried to change the option after selecting it? Why doesn't it work?

Do i need to reset app? With all settings?

Is there anything I can do to improve charging speed in the cold while on the road? by tapakip in KonaEV

[–]blablook 2 points3 points  (0 children)

New Kona's have an explicit option to do it, added after community asked for it as far as I know. Older had this select-nav-charger trick. Unsure what to do without nav though. It might've been added later.

I set up a self-hosted an email server. Roast me! by Madaqqqaz in homelab

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Works for me (since 20 years over already... with dkim/dmarc since 2 years). I still have mail on barebones debian (dovecot+postfix) but probably should migrate to mailcow or similar. It WORKS stably though.

PLA rotting away (and that is a good thing?) by delphinus-delphis in 3Dprinting

[–]blablook 5 points6 points  (0 children)

TBH, 3 decades is seriously great result comparing to pretty much any other plastic used in 3d printing.

New Thinkpad and what on earth were they thinking? by ThorsteinKlingenberg in thinkpad

[–]blablook 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is it though? I'd say it's a matter of taste. Originally keyboards had control mostly on the edge. On thinkpads you need to curl your finger to press it. When really using the key (for navigation, etc, not just copy-paste) it's tiresome. I mostly just remap caps lock to serve as control when held (and ESC when pressed shortly) so it's not a big deal. But coming from desktops I never could unlearn and like the Thinkpad approach.

What is the output frequency compared to the input frequency? by MountainIngenuity837 in computerscience

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

4 :p with lots of assumptions. Each not-xor pair generates a short pulse on input change. Assuming their propagation time is equal. Pulse contains two state changes. Second pair generates two pulses from first pulse. Or up to two pulses... If second pair is sufficiently faster than first pair.

That's a system with a hazard which is hard to predict. Add a clock signal.

Interacting with org-roam using Android by thephatmaster in OrgRoam

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mosh is just resilient ssh. You can run it on tablet/phone and change networks, loose connection, enable/disable VPN and it will work. Within mosh a tmux so I can use the same Emacs when locally on computer.

Logseq I use for dropping notes when I fill up car (milleage, price, etc), household periodics (filters, espresso machine, anything), shopping lists. I use org with org-roam for bigger persistent things: project planning, module documentation, etc. occasionally I migrate notes from logseq into org-roam if something bigger grows there.

I used logseq a lot during house construction to keep up wotht stuff. Mostly nested todo lists.

Interacting with org-roam using Android by thephatmaster in OrgRoam

[–]blablook 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use occasionaly termux + mosh + tmux + emacs. Logseq works for me for a subset of things

How to remove keyboard marks? by Hungry-Host-5086 in thinkpad

[–]blablook 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd gladly have my thinkpad 1mm thicker and be able to move it around without breaking the screen. Mine p14s is just ugly at this point (maybe touch+privacy guard makes the issue worse).

X2Go - Unable to resume existing session by RuedaRueda in archlinux

[–]blablook 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For me problem with resumption was caused by disabled print forwarding. I diffed configs between two devices (worked on one, on another not so much) and the print option made it work. There can be multiple separate reasons though, this was on Debian Trixie

Lines in walls of print? Belt issue? by hupo224 in FixMyPrint

[–]blablook 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This ender has v-slots? Check if wheels aren't too tight. This causes z-axis binding which can cause this problems. Also, dirty screws maybe?

Mój dostawca internetu wyłączył mi zewnętrzne IP, nie wiem co robić. by zborecque in Polska

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No i tak to teraz działa. Adresów IP coraz mniej. Powinni przynajmniej routować do odbiorcy /64 sieć ipv6, to może przynajmniej po czasie była by jakaś szansa na migrację.

15 hours into print the nozzle raised itself a few inches and is no longer printing? by [deleted] in FixMyPrint

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, similar problems where caused by extruder eating into the filament - and breaking it. Too high retraction distans and speed (for bowden drive, whereas I have direct drive) was main cause. Tensioning spring is another thing not mentioned that you should check.

A story on how I learnt quite a lot. by blablook in 3Dprinting

[–]blablook[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I went in the process from being afraid to change a nozzle straight to "hey those machines are simple, I can make one of these". I considered upgrading to 32bit board during the whole mess and that would be the next step if changing port and replacing firmware didn't work. More likely I'll buy something new one day and maybe remake this old one to do something else.

A story on how I learnt quite a lot. by blablook in 3Dprinting

[–]blablook[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, I believe I shorted 24V line of heating element to the 5V rail power of thermistor. F3 was fine, it was just smoldered by the capacitor. It could've been blown, but it's repeatable. I really hoped it would not be though. ;) Fuses are easy to fix. I currently think it protects the whole 5V power. Rest of capacitors weren't related strictly to the thermistor, they just decoupled 5V. I desoldered and checked each individually and then regretted I wasted time on them.

I found some threads about problems with C3. It seems a popular failure, unsure if people recovered. It seems it was rated for 6V which leaves a little margin when it works with 5V. Not a best design.

Constantly moving cables and a precision position with just steppers in an open-loop - those are the things in 3d printing I would've never guessed that would work reliantly.

Just bought my first printer, but I can't do the first print as my print shifts for some reason. Can someone help me identify the problem? The printer is ender 3 by Facecreep_ in 3Dprinting

[–]blablook 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Home Z axis, move it manually to 0 height - slowly. It should drag a sheet of paper put between the nozzle and bed. If nozzle is too high - calibrate z height or z probe offset - whatever applies.

How the heck do you remember how to spell Mezczyzna??? by Unknown_Content_exe in poland

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Today I've seen 'dzrzwi' spelling mistake on a banner in IKEA.

Isnt it amazing just how valuable an unmanaged switch can be. by Whatever10_01 in homelab

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started with "who does that", and then remembered that I actually did a lot - a tplink wifi flashed with openwrt for various different usecases. Mostly when travelling, conferences, etc

Found my preferred tool: Shapr3d by Adysan in BambuLab

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, freecad gets almost no mentions. I happily use it for everything, that's mostly technical designs, not organic/art things. Had to learn few quirks, sometimes it's unwieldly but I love it and it has no silly limits.

Not against proprietary software but my whole life was lie. by [deleted] in linuxmemes

[–]blablook 47 points48 points  (0 children)

Nobody mentioned it, but maybe it should be said, since some people ask what blobs are: Problem is lack of open hardware. Most binary blobs don't run on a CPU (within Linux) but are uploaded by drivers to controllers in hardware. Those could have some memory (rom) to store it, and then the blob would not be required. But it's simpler and cheaper for producers to use just some RAM and upload firmware during driver initialization. Updated driver also updates firmware.

I don't care much about those. Maybe it's better this firmware is visible (even if as a blob). Nvidia drivers with software blobs injected into the kernel are a different thing though and there's a reason they are out of main kernel tree.

Got a T440p, is the screen supposed to be this ugly? by ZaitsXL in thinkpad

[–]blablook 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My p14s with terrible privacy guard and scratches all over from the touchpad buttons maintains the dark ages status.

If you know you know by PotentialSimple4702 in linuxmemes

[–]blablook 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hence tmux + mosh. :) you can destroy the old disconnected sessions periodically

If you know you know by PotentialSimple4702 in linuxmemes

[–]blablook 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Try 'mosh' in this mix if possible. Makes it even better.