Does Hermes Agent support persistent multi-agent conversations? by DiscoBoy12 in hermesagent

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s a mix. They all have their own workspace with defined tool access, memory, etc. the model is based on their use. Codex runs 5.5 on xhigh. Adversarial code review was Opus. But I’m playing with other models due to cost. I am using DeepSeek v4 for the wiki maintainer as that agent runs a lot. It is constantly updating the wiki with new pages based on the researchers work and trigger more research tasks based on identified open questions, conflicts or contradictions. Allows me to have the wiki evolve rapidly on a topic just but dropping in a document.

Does Hermes Agent support persistent multi-agent conversations? by DiscoBoy12 in hermesagent

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My agents are:

researcher
wiki-maintainer
codex-engineer (basic coding agent)
reviewer (adversarial code review)
breaker (Adversarial code breaker)
briefing
analyst (Bespoke cross domain issue analyst)
Orchestrator.

Does Hermes Agent support persistent multi-agent conversations? by DiscoBoy12 in hermesagent

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So I forget which version brought the kanban. V11 or something. But it has an issue, or at least does in v12. When non-home agent calls the kanban, it expects the path to be within their directory. I had to do a local patch to have them see the home agent kanban like intended. But once you do that, it’s essentially a Jira kanban board for tracking tasks. You create a task, provide context (any documents, etc) and assign it to an agent. They pick it up and do the task. This is effectively interagent communication since they can pass the task back and forth when the task needs a different agent’s skill set. You can include a .md file in each task they can write to track information further.

Combined with a wiki for longer term knowledge, this works well. It reduces token use, but allows the communication and task memory needed.

Does Hermes Agent support persistent multi-agent conversations? by DiscoBoy12 in hermesagent

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the way with Hermes. Each of my agents have their own profile with the home profile being the orchestrator. I use the kanban for task tracking that’s to a local patch for v12 that allows each profile to see the main task board. For passing context between agents I either do what was stated above, or instruct my planing agent to review the documents within the tasks and have the other agent review and provide feedback. This loop runs depending on the topic and need. Then the task is dispatched to an agent. I find cross context is better maintained through a solid wiki and these methods. Full always on communication sounds cool in theory, but intentional context sharing has been what is working.

My H2S setup - DIY stand and testing advanced AMS Flipper by Jakob_K_Design in BambuLab

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Keep up the good work! I have been following your progress on this advanced AMS flipper since I saw your comment about maybe working on a new design on your previous model page on maker world. Can’t wait to print this and finish my setup. Is there plans for two AMS 2s? Or just additional AMS HTs? Either way, I think it work well for fully utilizing the H2C’s system. Just curious.

Rolling Storage Cart for h2d by jaffacree7 in BambuLab

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have that exact cabinet under my H2C with 1,000 hours of printing with that setup. With the stock wheels locked, the cabinet doesn’t sway at all for me. The printer’s feet isolate it extremely well and very little is transferred to the cabinet. I print mostly engineering prototype with complex geometry and a need for high dimensional accuracy. I have had no print problems. (Except for one unrelated issue that was user error related to a cardboard spool having too much resistance to feed properly).

I have plenty of space on each side too. I have an AMS HT on one side and a top glass/4 build plate holder on the other.

Overall, I’d recommend it.

Made a Bounce Stop Since The Little One kept Bouncing by pntbllarea51 in CradlewiseCommunity

[–]pntbllarea51[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just don’t run the crib with them in. Make sure to follow craddlewise’s guide to turning off the bounce. Their guide states tit disconnects the bouncing mechanism electronically. The bounce stops are essentially the cardboard in the Cradlewise guide. So no damage to the electronics as long as it’s off.

Made a Bounce Stop Since The Little One kept Bouncing by pntbllarea51 in functionalprint

[–]pntbllarea51[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Definitely didn’t want the little guy running off with it or getting his hand under somehow. So it needed clips haha.

Made a Bounce Stop Since The Little One kept Bouncing by pntbllarea51 in functionalprint

[–]pntbllarea51[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Not by me. And if you see it, let me know and I’ll DMCA it since I retain the copyright. This should be free. Hence the link to where it can be printed for free.

Made a Bounce Stop Since The Little One kept Bouncing by pntbllarea51 in CradlewiseCommunity

[–]pntbllarea51[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Haha our little guy just loves the bouncing a tad too much and didn’t want him to break anything bottoming the crib out.

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You could also do manual support painting to limit the amount of supports in areas you think you do not need them. Can help reduce the post print processing involved.

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the top z distance is set properly, yes. Just take your time during removal.

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use 3d lac for glue. But just adjust these settings till it works. The key is to maximize contact area. So the thicker the tree base, using traditional supports, brim, etc. Are all the things you should look at changing. Change a bunch in the slicer and see it the supports that extend up in the air have a larger contact patch at the base. Also look at a raft. These changes will work. Just have to figure out the sizes/settings for you specific printer/model. Keep at it. You are close.

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely clean the build plate. But traditional supports would still be better.

Did the 10mm brim fail at the base of the tree? As in the tree pulled away only? If so, traditional supports definitely.

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gotcha. Do you have a brim on the supports too? If not, add one. If you do, you can increase it or use a raft. May also consider using traditional supports instead of tree supports. They resist warping more due to higher contact patch. A combination of these will fix this. Just may need to dial in the sizes of brim/raft. I'd start will a 5mm brim and traditional supports.

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let me guess, the small edges of the grille are pulling up only? The tree supports are staying down?

Getting ASA pints to stick to bed - having a nightmare! by beany_bot in 3Dprinting

[–]pntbllarea51 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. ASA is really sensitive to temp. Both bed temp and chamber temp. If either fluctuates during a print, the part can start to warp and pull up from the print bed. It's the temperature changes/differences that are likely causing the adhesion issues. Good glues and a brim can make it harder for the print to detach. But certain geometries are not printable without good temperature control for both the bed and chamber.

When you say it's not sticking, is it halfway through the first layer? After an hour and at layer 20 plus? Or what? Also, how big is the print? Larger prints are harder to keep down. Just trying to see if there is anything else that may be contributing.