Podcasts about creality ender

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Amazon.co.jp: 「公式」Creality Ender 3 S1 3Dプリンター 迅速な組立 自動水平調整 96%組立 デュアルZ軸スクリュー PCシート FDM 3Dプリンター 停電復帰 鋼製プリントベッド 造形サイズ220x220x270mm 日本語の操作とマニュアル : 産業・研究開発用品 ご意見、ご感想はTwitterのハッシュタグ#ごりゅごcastかお便りフォームにお送りください。

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Perfect First Layer Podcast
Which Core XY Printer? Budget CNC, Nathan at FormNext and MORE!!!

Perfect First Layer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2023 59:03


This Episodes Questions: Hello Guy, Nathan, and JJ, I might be interested in purchasing a 3d printer before the end of 2023. I have some experience with printers, but still kinda a beginner with them. I have previously owned a Bambu lab P1P and a Creality Ender 3 v2. If I wanted to purchase another printer this year, what are some great options $700 or less($700 before tax, so including Bambu p1s). If I do get one, I think I might want to get an enclosed one. There are a lot of options, such as, the K1, Qidi x plus 3, Flashforge Adventurer 5m pro, and Bambu lab p1s. If there are any others that are good options, please let me know. This is a long message, but any help with giving me confidence in a potential purchase is appreciated. I think for me personally, it might be between the p1s and the Flashforge Adventurer 5m pro, but let me know what you guys think. Thank you, much appreciated :) E. Morgan Hey everyone! I hope ya'll are doing well! I have a quick question for you, Guy. I want to get into CNC machines, except I need to know which to get. It does need to be a cheap budget one, as I'm primarily using it to cut acrylic and thinner wood pieces. In the future, I wouldn't mind cutting bigger pieces. Any advice would help! Thank you! Luis Send Us Your Questions! perfectfirstlayer@gmail.com

3d Printing Basics
3DB #11 Essential Upgrades for an Ender 3

3d Printing Basics

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2023 8:42


In this weeks episode, Tyler talks about the essential upgrades he would make to a Creality Ender 3. Email - 3dprintingsquared@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/3dprintingbasics/support

Perfect First Layer Podcast
Creality Ender 3 V3 SE, Bed Leveling Woes, Printing Accuracy and MORE!!!

Perfect First Layer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2023 55:18


This weeks listeners questions: Hey guys, love the podcast! Leveling - Spring, silicone spacers, wheel locks, use a piece of paper, use a feeler gauge, etc.... for those of us that don't have a BambuLab printer or some machine that auto-levels for you in that there are NO leveling wheels to adjust, what is your guys' step-by-step process for getting a good level? Set Z-height, manual level, auto level? Use a piece of paper to gauge height? Keep the springs or swap them out for silicone spacers? There are a lot of "recommendations" on the interwebs when it comes to this and I'd love your take on it. Josh My workplace has a Prusa Mk2.5s that we can use for personal projects. I recently printed a set of inserts for my router table plate. Getting their height extremely accurate is important, and I've found that the prusa is consistently printing thing about .003" thicker than designed. The ID of the holes in the center of the part is consistently.004" undersized. Is this level of accuracy acceptable for a printer like this? What kinda of things can I do tune it? Should I just account for it in my designs? Or am I being too damn picky? Enjoying the podcast, keep it up. P.S. Guy, if you've got any printers you want taken off your hands, you should reach out to me before your son! I'll trade you a knife Theo Hi, im Altair and i love the 3d printing world and your podcasts is so usefull to me, but ill get to the point. I have a Ender 3 V2 Neo, its great but im not im home a lot and i cant use i a lot, so, could you recomend me a tiny printer that i could move and take with me. Thanks. Altair

The History of Computing
One History Of 3D Printing

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 30:59


One of the hardest parts of telling any history, is which innovations are significant enough to warrant mention. Too much, and the history is so vast that it can't be told. Too few, and it's incomplete. Arguably, no history is ever complete. Yet there's a critical path of innovation to get where we are today, and hundreds of smaller innovations that get missed along the way, or are out of scope for this exact story. Children have probably been placing sand into buckets to make sandcastles since the beginning of time. Bricks have survived from round 7500BC in modern-day Turkey where humans made molds to allow clay to dry and bake in the sun until it formed bricks. Bricks that could be stacked. And it wasn't long before molds were used for more. Now we can just print a mold on a 3d printer.   A mold is simply a block with a hollow cavity that allows putting some material in there. People then allow it to set and pull out a shape. Humanity has known how to do this for more than 6,000 years, initially with lost wax casting with statues surviving from the Indus Valley Civilization, stretching between parts of modern day Pakistan and India. That evolved to allow casting in gold and silver and copper and then flourished in the Bronze Age when stone molds were used to cast axes around 3,000 BCE. The Egyptians used plaster to cast molds of the heads of rulers. So molds and then casting were known throughout the time of the earliest written works and so the beginning of civilization. The next few thousand years saw humanity learn to pack more into those molds, to replace objects from nature with those we made synthetically, and ultimately molding and casting did its part on the path to industrialization. As we came out of the industrial revolution, the impact of all these technologies gave us more and more options both in terms of free time as humans to think as well as new modes of thinking. And so in 1868 John Wesley Hyatt invented injection molding, patenting the machine in 1872. And we were able to mass produce not just with metal and glass and clay but with synthetics. And more options came but that whole idea of a mold to avoid manual carving and be able to produce replicas stretched back far into the history of humanity. So here we are on the precipice of yet another world-changing technology becoming ubiquitous. And yet not. 3d printing still feels like a hobbyists journey rather than a mature technology like we see in science fiction shows like Star Trek with their replicators or printing a gun in the Netflix show Lost In Space. In fact the initial idea of 3d printing came from a story called Things Pass By written all the way back in 1945! I have a love-hate relationship with 3D printing. Some jobs just work out great. Others feel very much like personal computers in the hobbyist era - just hacking away until things work. It's usually my fault when things go awry. Just as it was when I wanted to print things out on the dot matrix printer on the Apple II. Maybe I fed the paper crooked or didn't check that there was ink first or sent the print job using the wrong driver. One of the many things that could go wrong.  But those fast prints don't match with the reality of leveling and cleaning nozzles and waiting for them to heat up and pulling filament out of weird places (how did it get there, exactly)! Or printing 10 add-ons for a printer to make it work the way it probably should have out of the box.  Another area where 3d printing is similar to the early days of the personal computer revolution is that there are a few different types of technology in use today. These include color-jet printing (CJP), direct metal printing (DMP), fused deposition modeling (FDM), Laser Additive Manufacturing (LAM, multi-jet printing (MJP), stereolithography (SLA), selective laser melting (SLM), and selective laser sintering (SLS). Each could be better for a given type of print job to be done. Some forms have flourished while others are either their infancy or have been abandoned like extinct languages. Language isolates are languages that don't fit into other families. Many are the last in a branch of a larger language family tree. Others come out of geographically isolated groups. Technology also has isolates. Konrad Zuse built computers in pre-World War II Germany and after that aren't considered to influence other computers. In other words, every technology seems to have a couple of false starts. Hideo Kodama filed the first patent to 3d print in 1980 - but his method of using UV lights to harden material doesn't get commercialized.  Another type of 3d printing includes printers that were inkjets that shot metal alloys onto surfaces. Inkjet printing was invented by Ichiro Endo at Canon in the 1950s, supposedly when he left a hot iron on a pen and ink bubbled out. Thus the “Bubble jet” printer. And Jon Vaught at HP was working on the same idea at about the same time. These were patented and used to print images from computers over the coming decades. Johannes Gottwald patented a printer like this in 1971. Experiments continued through the 1970s when companies like Exxon were trying to improve various prototyping processes. Some of their engineers joined an inventor Robert Howard in the early 1980s to found a company called Howtek and they produced the Pixelmaster, using hot-melt inks to increment the ink jet with solid inks, which then went on to be used by Sanders Prototype, which evolved into a company called Solidscape to market the Modelmaker. And some have been used to print solar cells, living cells, tissue, and even edible birthday cakes. That same technique is available with a number of different solutions but isn't the most widely marketable amongst the types of 3D printers available. SLA There's often a root from which most technology of the day is derived. Charles, or Chuck, Hull coined the term stereolithography, where he could lay down small layers of an object and then cure the object with UV light, much as the dentists do with fillings today. This is made possibly by photopolymers, or plastics that are easily cured by an ultraviolet light. He then invented the stereolithography apparatus, or SLA for short, a machine that printed from the bottom to the top by focusing a laser on photopolymer while in a liquid form to cure the plastic into place. He worked on it in 1983, filed the patent in 1984, and was granted the patent in 1986.  Hull also developed a file format for 3D printing called STL. STL files describe the surface of a three-dimensional object, geometrically using Cartesian coordinates. Describing coordinates and vectors means we can make objects bigger or smaller when we're ready to print them. 3D printers print using layers, or slices. Those can change based on the filament on the head of a modern printer, the size of the liquid being cured, and even the heat of a nozzle. So the STL file gets put into a slicer that then converts the coordinates on the outside to the polygons that are cured. These are polygons in layers, so they may appear striated rather than perfectly curved according to the size of the layers. However, more layers take more time and energy. Such is the evolution of 3D printing. Hull then founded a company called 3D Systems in Valencia California to take his innovation to market. They sold their first printer, the SLA-1 in 1988. New technologies start out big and expensive. And that was the case with 3D Systems. They initially sold to large engineering companies but when solid-state lasers came along in 1996 they were able to provide better systems for cheaper.  Languages also have other branches. Another branch in 3d printing came in 1987, just before the first SLA-1 was sold.  Carl Deckard  and his academic adviser Joe Beaman at the University of Texas worked on a DARPA grant to experiment with creating physical objects with lasers. They formed a company to take their solution to market called DTM and filed a patent for what they called selective laser sintering. This compacts and hardens a material with a heat source without having to liquify it. So a laser, guided by a computer, can move around a material and harden areas to produce a 3D model. Now in addition to SLA we had a second option, with the release of the Sinterstation 2500plus. Then 3D Systems then acquired DTM for $45 million in 2001. FDM After Hull published his findings for SLA and created the STL format, other standards we use today emerged. FDM is short for Fused Deposition Modeling and was created by Scott Crump in 1989. He then started a company with his wife Lisa to take the product to market, taking the company public in 1994. Crump's first patent expired in 2009.  In addition to FDM, there are other formats and techniques. AeroMat made the first 3D printer that could produce metal in 1997. These use a laser additive manufacturing process, where lasers fuse powdered titanium alloys. Some go the opposite direction and create out of bacteria or tissue. That began in 1999, when Wake Forest Institute of Regenerative medicine grew a 3D printed urinary bladder in a lab to be used as a transplant. We now call this bioprinting and can take tissue and lasers to rebuild damaged organs or even create a new organ. Organs are still in their infancy with success trials on smaller animals like rabbits. Another aspect is printing dinner using cell fibers from cows or other animals. There are a number of types of materials used in 3D printing. Most printers today use a continuous feed of one of these filaments, or small coiled fibers of thermoplastics that melt instead of burn when they're heated up. The most common in use today is PLA, or polylactic acid, is a plastic initially created by Wall Carothers of DuPont, the same person that brought us nylon, neoprene, and other plastic derivatives. It typically melts between 200 and 260 degrees Celsius. Printers can also take ABS filament, which is short for acrylonitrile-butadien-styerene. Other filament types include HIPS, PET, CPE, PVA, and their derivative forms.  Filament is fed into a heated extruder assembly that melts the plastic. Once melted, filament extrudes into place through a nozzle as a motor sends the nozzle on a x and y axis per layer.  Once a layer of plastic is finished being delivered to the areas required to make up the desired slice, the motor moves the extruder assembly up or down on a z axis between layers. Filament is just between 1.75 millimeters and 3 millimeters and comes in spools between half a kilogram and two kilograms. These thermoplastics cool very quickly. Once all of the slices are squirted into place, the print is removed from the bed and the nozzle cools off. Filament comes in a number of colors and styles. For example, wood fibers can be added to filament to get a wood-grained finish. Metal can be added to make prints appear metallic and be part metal.  Printing isn't foolproof, though. Filament often gets jammed or the spool gets stuck, usually when something goes wrong. Filament also needs to be stored in a temperature and moisture controlled location or it can cause jobs to fail. Sometimes the software used to slice the .stl file has an incorrect setting, like the wrong size of filament. But in general, 3D printing using the FDM format is pretty straight forward these days. Yet this is technology that should have moved faster in terms of adoption. The past 10 years have seen more progress than the previous ten though. Primarily due to the maker community. Enter the Makers The FDM patent expired in 2009. In 2005, a few years before the FDM patent expired, Dr. Adrian Bowyer started a project to bring inexpensive 3D printers to labs and homes around the world. That project evolved into what we now call the Replicating Rapid Prototyper, or RepRap for short.  RepRap evolved into an open source concept to create self-replicating 3D printers and by 2008, the Darwin printer was the first printer to use RepRap. As a community started to form, more collaborators designed more parts. Some were custom parts to improve the performance of the printer, or replicate the printer to become other printers. Others held the computing mechanisms in place. Some even wrote code to make the printer able to boot off a MicroSD card and then added a network interface so files could be uploaded to the printer wirelessly. There was a rising tide of printers. People were reading about what 3D printers were doing and wanted to get involved. There was also a movement in the maker space, so people wanted to make things themselves. There was a craft to it. Part of that was wanting to share. Whether that was at a maker space or share ideas and plans and code online. Like the RepRap team had done.  One of those maker spaces was NYC Resistor, founded in 2007. Bre Pettis, Adam Mayer, and Zach Smith from there took some of the work from the RepRap project and had ideas for a few new projects they'd like to start. The first was a site that Zach Smith created called Thingiverse. Bre Pettis joined in and they allowed users to upload .stl files and trade them. It's now the largest site for trading hundreds of thousands of designs to print about anything imaginable. Well, everything except guns. Then comes 2009. The patent for FDM expires and a number of companies respond by launching printers and services. Almost overnight the price for a 3D printer fell from $10,000 to $1,000 and continued to drop. Shapeways had created a company the year before to take files and print them for people. Pettis, Mayer, and Smith from NYC Resistor also founded a company called MakerBot Industries. They'd already made a little bit of a name for themselves with the Thingiverse site. They knew the mind of a maker. And so they decided to make a kit to sell to people that wanted to build their own printers. They sold 3,500 kits in the first couple of years. They had a good brand and knew the people who bought these kinds of devices. So they took venture funding to grow the company. So they raised $10M in funding in 2011 in a round led by the Foundry Group, along with Bezos, RRE, 500 Startups and a few others. They hired and grew fast. Smith left in 2012 and they were getting closer and closer with Stratasys, who if we remember were the original creators of FDM. So Stratasys ended up buying out the company in 2013 for $403M. Sales were disappointing so there was a changeup in leadership, with Pettis leaving and they've become much more about additive manufacturing than a company built to appeal to makers. And yet the opportunity to own that market is still there. This was also an era of Kickstarter campaigns. Plenty of 3D printing companies launched through kickstarter including some to take PLA (a biodegradable filament) and ABS materials to the next level. The ExtrusionBot, the MagicBox, the ProtoPlant, the Protopasta, Mixture, Plybot, Robo3D, Mantis, and so many more.  Meanwhile, 3D printing was in the news. 2011 saw the University of Southhampton design a 3d printed aircraft. Ecologic printing cars, and practically every other car company following suit that they were fabricating prototypes with 3d printers, even full cars that ran. Some on their own, some accidentally when parts are published in .stl files online violating various patents.  Ultimaker was another RepRap company that came out of the early Darwin reviews. Martijn Elserman, Erik de Bruin, and Siert Wijnia who couldn't get the Darwin to work so they designed a new printer and took it to market. After a few iterations, they came up with the Ultimaker 2 and have since been growing and releasing new printers  A few years later, a team of Chinese makers, Jack Chen, Huilin Liu, Jingke Tang, Danjun Ao, and Dr. Shengui Chen took the RepRap designs and started a company to manufacturing (Do It Yourself) kits called Creality. They have maintained the open source manifesto of 3D printing that they inherited from RepRap and developed version after version, even raising over $33M to develop the Ender6 on Kickstarter in 2018, then building a new factory and now have the capacity to ship well over half a million printers a year. The future of 3D Printing We can now buy 3D printing pens, over 170 3D Printer manufacturers including 3D systems, Stratasys, and Ceality but also down-market solutions like Fusion3, Formlabs, Desktop Metal, Prusa, and Voxel8. There's also a RecycleBot concept and additional patents expiring every year.  There is little doubt that at some point, instead of driving to Home Depot to get screws or basic parts, we'll print them. Need a new auger for the snow blower? Just print it. Cover on the weed eater break?  Print it. Need a dracolich mini for the next Dungeons and Dragons game? Print it. Need a new pinky toe. OK, maybe that's a bit far. Or is it? In 2015, Swedish Cellink releases bio-ink made from seaweed and algae, which could be used to print cartilage and later released the INKREDIBLE 3D printer for bio printing. The market in 2020 was valued at $13.78 billion with 2.1 million printers shipped. That's expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 21% for the next few years. But a lot of that is healthcare, automotive, aerospace, and prototyping still. Apple made the personal computer simple and elegant. But no Apple has emerged for 3D printing. Instead it still feels like the Apple II era, where there are 3D printers in a lot of schools and many offer classes on generating files and printing.  3D printers are certainly great for prototypers and additive manufacturing. They're great for hobbyists, which we call makers these days. But there will be a time when there is a printer in most homes, the way we have electricity, televisions, phones, and other critical technologies. But there are a few things that have to happen first, to make the printers easier to use. These include: Every printer needs to automatically level. This is one of the biggest reasons jobs fail and new users become frustrated. More consistent filament. Spools are still all just a little bit different. Printers need sensors in the extruder that detect if a job should be paused because the filament is jammed, humid, or caught. This adds the ability to potentially resume print jobs and waste less filament and time. Automated slicing in the printer microcode that senses the filament and slices. Better system boards (e.g. there's a tool called Klipper that moves the math from the system board on a Creality Ender 3 to a Raspberry Pi). Cameras on the printer should watch jobs and use TinyML to determine if they are going to fail as early as possible to halt printing so it can start over. Most of the consumer solutions don't have great support. Maybe users are limited to calling a place in a foreign country where support hours don't make sense for them or maybe the products are just too much of a hacker/maker/hobbyist solution. There needs to be an option for color printing. This could be a really expensive sprayer or ink like inkjet printers use at first We love to paint minis we make for Dungeons and Dragons but could get amazingly accurate resolutions to create amazing things with automated coloring.  For a real game changer, the RecycleBot concept needs to be merged with the printer. Imagine if we dropped our plastics into a recycling bin that 3D printers of the world used to create filament. This would help reduce the amount of plastics used in the world in general. And when combined with less moving around of cheap plastic goods that could be printed at home, this also means less energy consumed by transporting goods. The 3D printing technology is still a generation or two away from getting truly mass-marketed. Most hobbyists don't necessarily think of building an elegant, easy-to-use solution because they are so experienced it's hard to understand what the barriers of entry are for any old person. But the company who finally manages to crack that nut might just be the next Apple, Microsoft, or Google of the world.

Ask Noah Show
Episode 317: Ask Noah Show 317

Ask Noah Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 53:51


It's Christmas time! This hour Noah and Steve dig through their favorite gift ideas for your geek! -- During The Show -- 01:15 Intro Dakota's weather is Cold 02:00 Listener Responds to Email Backup - Griffon Fetchmail Procmail Blog Post (https://easierbuntu.blogspot.com/2011/09/managing-your-email-with-fetchmail.html?m=1) Linux.com Link (https://www.linux.com/news/process-your-email-procmail/) 04:20 Lenovo X270 issue - Cory Unplugging the charger causes throttling External battery causing issues Linux vs Windows BIOS switch Try another external battery Noticed throttling at 30% battery 09:30 Synology on AMD? - Jeremy DS1621+ (Ryzen V1500B) (https://www.synology.com/en-us/products/DS1621+) DS1621XS+ (Xeon D1527) (https://www.synology.com/en-us/products/DS1621xs+) AMD does have an answer to quick sync 12:00 Listener Response FF profiles - Peter Firefox Docs (https://docs.telemetry.mozilla.org/concepts/profile/profile_creation.html) Shortcuts with the profile name Profiles could cause issues Multi Account Containers (https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/containers) Multi Account Containers Plugin (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/multi-account-containers/) 16:54 News Wire PeaZip 9.0 Its Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/peazip-9-0-release/) Debian 11.6 Debian (https://www.debian.org/News/2022/20221217) Linux Mint 21.1 OMG Ubuntu (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2022/12/linux-mint-21-1-released-available-to-download) XFCE 4.18 XFCE (https://www.xfce.org/about/tour418) Kdenlive 22.12 Kdenlive (https://kdenlive.org/en/2022/12/kdenlive-22-12-released/) Firefox 108 The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/12/14/firefox_108/) Firefox 109 Linux Today (https://www.linuxtoday.com/developer/firefox-109-introduce-new-unified-extensions-button/) Ardour 7.2 Ardour (https://ardour.org/whatsnew.html) Steam Dec 13th Beta Gaming On Linux (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2022/12/valve-fix-the-new-big-picture-mode-on-nvidia-for-linux-gamers/) RazerGenie 1.0 Gaming On Linux (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2022/12/razergenie-a-qt-app-for-configuring-your-razer-devices-version-10-out-now/) PostmarketOS 22.12 Liliputing (https://liliputing.com/mobile-linux-distro-postmarketos-22-12-brings-fairphone-4-and-samsung-galaxy-tab-2-10-1-support/) Linux 6.2 exFAT CNX Software (https://www.cnx-software.com/2022/12/19/linux-6-2-exfat-update-to-improve-performance-when-creating-files-and-directories/) Intel LAM "fundamentally broken" Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Torvalds-Bashes-Intel-LAM) GNU Linux-libre 6.1 FSFLA (https://www.fsfla.org/pipermail/linux-libre/2022-December/003500.html) Freed-ora Effort Ended Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Freed-ora-No-More) NuGet, PyPi, and NPM, Targeted The Hacker News (https://thehackernews.com/2022/12/hackers-bombard-open-source.html) PineTab2 ArsTechnica (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/12/pinetab-2-is-a-rockchip-based-linux-powered-repairable-tablet/) Sokol Flex ported to RISC-V EE News Europe (https://www.eenewseurope.com/en/siemens-ports-sokol-linux-to-risc-v-2/) HULK-V Semi Engineering (https://semiengineering.com/heterogeneous-ultra-low-power-risc-v-soc-running-linux/) MS Provides Linux DirectX Binaries Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Microsoft-DX-Shader-Linux-Build) MS Soundscape Discontinued Review Geek (https://www.reviewgeek.com/139307/microsofts-most-unique-app-goes-open-source/) Pulsar Editor Its Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/pulsar-editor/) SPEAR Under MIT License The Robot Report (https://www.therobotreport.com/intel-labs-introduces-open-source-simulator-for-ai/) Meta Releases Abuse Scanning Tool Engadget (https://www.engadget.com/meta-open-source-tool-scan-terrorist-content-130952284.html) Meta Oversight Board Findings [Engadget][https://www.engadget.com/meta-oversight-board-finds-cross-check-puts-business-concerns-ahead-of-human-rights-110005614.html] Brankas Open Manila Standard (https://manilastandard.net/pop-life/314288060/brankas-develops-worlds-first-banking-as-a-service-open-source-license.html) Foundation Devices raised $7M Tech Crunch (https://techcrunch.com/2022/12/19/foundation-devices-seed/) Alphabet Acquires ROS Tech Crunch (https://techcrunch.com/2022/12/15/alphabets-intrinsic-acquires-darpa-backed-firm-behind-open-source-robotics-software/) Open Source Services Expected to Grow Yahoo (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/open-source-services-market-worth-140000662.html) CNCF Received DevSpace Open Source For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/12/cncf-receives-a-donation-for-their-open-source-project-devspace/) Linux Foundation Formed the Overture Maps Foundation Linux Foundation (https://www.linuxfoundation.org/press/linux-foundation-announces-overture-maps-foundation-to-build-interoperable-open-map-data) 23:46 Police Raid based on Find my iPhone Police raid elderly Colorado woman's house Police fail to verify iPhone ownership iPhone location Police trashed the house broke sentimental items smashed in the ceiling broke down doors after being offered the key Person could have falsified location data NBC News (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/crime-courts/colorado-grandmother-sues-police-detective-swat-raid-based-false-find-rcna60039) Lots of questionable actions by police 32:20 Elon, Twitter, and Free Speech Twitter suspended several high-profile journalists accounts What is free speech? Mastodon 38:00 Pine 64 Update PineTab2 Pine64 Update (https://www.pine64.org/2022/12/15/december-update-merry-christmas-and-happy-new-pinetab/) 39:00 Gifts for Geeks M5 Stick Plus (https://shop.m5stack.com/collections/m5-controllers/products/m5stickc-plus-esp32-pico-mini-iot-development-kit) 41:00 Caller Wayne from Grand Forks Whole home audio pycroft setup? Volumio (https://volumio.com/en/) Visual indicators 46:30 Gifts for Geeks Continued PineTime Smartwatch $27 (https://pine64.com/product/pinetime-smartwatch-sealed/) Electronics Lab $70 Playz Electronics Lab (https://www.educationaltoysplanet.com/playz-advanced-electronic-circuit-board-engineering-toy-for-b07qbqzxhk.html) Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/Playz-Engineering-Educational-Experiments-Connections/dp/B07QBQZXHK/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?crid=FDIPXKNV4H14&keywords=electronics+lab&qid=1671572541&sprefix=electronics+lab%2Caps%2C124&sr=8-1-spons&ufe=app_do%3Aamzn1.fos.006c50ae-5d4c-4777-9bc0-4513d670b6bc&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUExN09JMFdGSDRDNkZMJmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwNDc0ODAyMkFVS0UyQk03UEpVMiZlbmNyeXB0ZWRBZElkPUEwNDc3OTE5MTI2RkFNVUJaQjRROCZ3aWRnZXROYW1lPXNwX2F0ZiZhY3Rpb249Y2xpY2tSZWRpcmVjdCZkb05vdExvZ0NsaWNrPXRydWU=) Plantronics Blackwire 3220 $37 (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0775S8X5C/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1) GoControl Hub Z1 $44 (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01GJ826F8/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o09_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1) Anker iQ $60 (https://www.amazon.com/Anker-Charger-Compact-Foldable-MacBook/dp/B09C5RG6KV/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?crid=37HO9AZAQSOMT&keywords=Anker+IQ&qid=1671571487&sprefix=anker+iq%2Caps%2C120&sr=8-1-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzTk1TUEUxTTRYUFU2JmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwMDk0NTkxMUU2WlU4RVVLVFE3VyZlbmNyeXB0ZWRBZElkPUEwMDQ2OTk4M09WVkFMSkpHVklETCZ3aWRnZXROYW1lPXNwX2F0ZiZhY3Rpb249Y2xpY2tSZWRpcmVjdCZkb05vdExvZ0NsaWNrPXRydWU=) Odroid H3 $129 (https://www.hardkernel.com/shop/odroid-h3/) Creality Ender 3 S1 $480 (https://www.creality.com/products/ender-3-3d-printer) SteamDeck $400-$650 (https://store.steampowered.com/steamdeck) -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/317) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)

Hoje no TecMundo Podcast
Hackeado no Insta? Instagram lança ajuda! Elon Musk fica bolado e bane usuários - Hoje no TecMundo 16/12/22

Hoje no TecMundo Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 12:08


Vamos ver as principais notícias de tecnologia de hoje são: Fire TV Stick travando com bug do Globoplay, Elon Musk tem dados de localização revelados no Twitter, Instagram lança página para recuperação de contas hackeadas e muito mais. Confira!

Making Awesome - Inventors, makers, small business
Features you NEED in a 3D Printer for your BUSINESS!!! - Making Awesome S3E10

Making Awesome - Inventors, makers, small business

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 98:28


With the previous episode talking all about best printers for beginners, let's discuss the differences for a business. Is it good to get a cheap Ender 3? (no) but where does that value line get drawn here between part cost, reliability, warranty, customer service, and more. A business has different needs than a consumer and they can't just fumble around waiting for parts to arrive or tuning settings for weeks, for a small business, it just needs to work.. Topics to cover: The @Creality Ender 3 and it's many Variants The CR-10 and it's variants The @Elegoo Official Netpune 3 and 3 Pro @Sovol SV06 @Prusa 3D by Josef Prusa Mini+ and MK3S+ as well as the Prusa XL @Bambu Lab X1 Carbon and the latest P1P Resin Printers: @Formlabs Form 3, Form 3 L, Fuse 1 (SLS) @Elegoo Official Mars, Saturn, Jupiter @ANYCUBIC Photon lineup @Phrozen 3D Printer Sonic series @Moai by Peopoly Phenom line What features we like in them all, how they price out, and why you may choose one over another __________________________________ Do you have an idea you want to get off the ground? Reach out to the Making Awesome Podcast through https://3DMusketeers.com/podcast and someone will get you set up to be a guest!

Making Awesome - Inventors, makers, small business
What 3D printer should YOU BUY?!?! - Making Awesome S3E9

Making Awesome - Inventors, makers, small business

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 82:54


The holidays are upon us, and that means, for some, a first 3d printer, but the decision on what to get and why is not always straightforward or easy. So many options out there, let's talk about the feature sets you should be looking for and see, maybe, what a good first printer could be. This will augment an upcoming main channel video talking about our top picks for budget 3d printers, so keep an eye out for that! Topics to cover: The @Creality Ender 3 and it's many Variants The CR-10 and it's variants Clones of each The @Elegoo Official Neptune 3 and 3 Pro @ANYCUBIC Kobra @Sovol SV06 @Prusa 3D by Josef Prusa Mini+ and MK3S+ @Bambu Lab X1 Carbon @VORON Design kit, maybe form @LDOMOTORS JASON What features we like in them all, how they price out, and why you may choose one over another __________________________________ Do you have an idea you want to get off the ground? Reach out to the Making Awesome Podcast through https://3DMusketeers.com/podcast and someone will get you set up to be a guest!

Adafruit Industries
EYE on NPI - Creality Ender-3 S1 Pro 3D Printer

Adafruit Industries

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 12:35


This week's EYE ON NPI merges Creativity with Reality - we're showcasing the bumper crop of Creality 3D printers now available from Digi-Key! (https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/c/creality/ender-3-s1-pro-3d-printer) We've covered lots of tools (https://blog.adafruit.com/2022/07/13/eye-on-npi-jonard-tools-rapid-microduct-deburring-tool-eyeonnpi-3dprinting-jonardtools-digikey-adafruit/), soldering irons (https://blog.adafruit.com/2021/01/26/the-great-search-solder-leaded-lead-free-and-silver-bearing-thegreatsearch-digikey-adafruit-digikey-adafruit/) and 'scopes (https://blog.adafruit.com/2022/06/14/the-great-search-a-good-beginner-oscilloscope-thegreatsearch-adafruit-digikey-adafruit-digikey/) that are all available from Digi-Key, just like small components. Did you know that you can also get full-on 3D printers? And why not? We love 3D printing for enclosures and prototyping. (https://www.thingiverse.com/adafruit/designs) Digi-Key is now a stockist of Creality 3D printers (https://www.digikey.com/en/supplier-centers/creality-3d), from the popular CR-10 (https://www.digikey.com/short/n07ww0wv) to the brand new Ender-3 S1 Pro. (https://www.digikey.com/short/05nrjnh5) Creality's Ender-3 S1 Pro high-temperature printer is equipped with CR-Touch automatic bed-leveling, the Sprite full-metal direct dual-gear extruder, a 32-bit silent mainboard, and more at a very affordable price point. The innovative Sprite dual-gear direct extruder has an extrusion force of 80N and enables smooth feeding. The Ender-3 S1 Pro supports printing with flexible filaments (TPU) and other filaments (PLA, ABS, wood, TPU, PETG, and PA). The CR-Touch auto-leveling allows for quick, accurate, and complete leveling, as well as providing automatic compensation for a 16-point printing height on the heat bed. The nozzle is made of brass, enabling high-temperature printing up to 300°C. The Ender 3 S1 Pro is an improved version of the very successful Ender 3. The 4.3-inch LCD enables click-to-control, supports nine languages, and will automatically dim for energy-saving if there is no action for three minutes. The Ender-3 S1 Pro is certified to international standards. Creality provides after-sales service for the printer (12 months) and for wearing parts (3 months). Features High-temperature printing: up to +300°C Supports multiple filaments: PLA, ABS, wood, TPU, PETG, and PA Sprite direct extruder: 80N extrusion force for smooth feeding Accurate and efficient CR-Touch auto-leveling Durable PEI spring steel build plate with good adhesion 4.3-inch LCD with an easy-to-use interactive UI enabling click-to-control 96% pre-installed, six-step assembly Laser engraving unlocks creation potential Certified to international standards Quality guarantee: after-sales service for the printer (12 mo.) and wearing parts (3 mo.) These printers are very popular with makers, students and engineers: they are fairly easy to set up and have auto-leveling/calibration. We happened to pick one of these up a few months ago, had it put together in a few hours on the weekend, and printing. The quality is great, and we've had no issues with clogged nozzles or failed prints. If the last printer you owned was a Cupcake kit, you'll be impressed with how far printers have come these days. It's common to get touch screens, WiFi control, cameras, configurable temperature and pre-heat, and firmware upgrades. No special tools, soldering or Arduino coding is required to assemble, either. Once you've got your printer going, check out the Ruiz Bro's 3D Hangouts playlist for hundreds of videos with tons of info on how to create great looking, easy-to-print designs. (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjF7R1fz_OOVgpmWevin2slopw_A3-A8Y) We've also got a huge collection of models for various Adafruit boards (https://github.com/adafruit/Adafruit_CAD_Parts) to make it easy to integrate them into your design. Digi-Key also stocks hundreds of different spools of filament (https://www.digikey.com/en/products/filter/3d-printing-filaments/944), so be sure to pick up some fun colors or materials to go along. There's also a huge number of accessories available if you need replacement nozzles, fans, heaters, beds, etc. (https://www.digikey.com/en/products/filter/3d-printing-accessories/956) If you want to get started with 3D printing, you can order today and have it delivered from Digi-Key's US warehouse for immediate shipment with no import shipping issues. Save some money with UPS ground, or if you're on a tight deadline, send a Creality Ender 3D printer (https://www.digikey.com/short/05nrjnh5) by air so you can be extruding by tomorrow afternoon!

HacíaFalta
#233: Perros y robots

HacíaFalta

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 25:55


Tom Hanks otra vez solo en el mundo Repasamos Finch, la película de Tom Hanks en Apple TV+, aunque sin spoilers como siempre. El caso es que acabamos hablando de la mosca, y volvemos a las impresoras 3D. Patrocinador: Todo el mundo a ver El Último Duelo en los cines ya mismo https://www.google.com/search?q=el+ultimo+duelo+entradas. Adam Driver, Matt Damon, Jodie Comer y Ben Affleck en una cinta basada en hechos reales sobre la nobleza francesa del siglo XIV, y dirigida por Ridley Scott, con la crítica por las nubes. Qué más queréis. Finch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0bYWnP3jH4 SPOILER: Does the dog die – Finch https://www.doesthedogdie.com/media/817896 Dibujos – Charlotte's Web 1973 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rv7A4tg7G1k CGI – Charlotte's Web 2006 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YSC7NrzDt24 The Fly https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vR9WiqXnnk The Fly 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yS6E2EXlnI The Fly 2 – Dog Scene https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZtJiU-pZCIQ El perro de La Mosca 2 haría llorar a cualquier amante de los animales https://screenrant.com/fly-2-movie-dog-subplot-animal-lover-cry/ Dances with Wolves – Two Socks https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMRNmrXfivI Diferencias entre Fundación en AppleTV y los libros https://mashable.com/article/foundation-book-vs-show Sinterización https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinterizaci%C3%B3n Video: DMLS: Direct Metal Laser Sintering https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiUUZxp7bLQ Video: SLS: Selective Laser Sintering https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=848x-5rKhNk Candyfab: Sinterización de azucar https://candyfab.org/ Creality Ender 3 V2 https://www.creality3dofficial.com/products/ender-3-v2-3d-printer Creality Ender 3 V2: Chulada para empezar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMC6bIB92j0 Amazon: Creality Ender 3 V2 https://amzn.to/30hB5Be Creality CR-6 SE https://www.creality.com/goods-detail/cr-6-se-3d-printer Amazon: Creality CR-6 SE https://amzn.to/3wDI834 RepRap Firmware https://reprap.org/wiki/RepRap_Firmware Síguenos en Twitter @haciafalta http://twitter.com/haciafalta

Jeanviet - L'informatique pour tous (podcast audio)
1ère impression 3D avec la Creality Ender 3 V2

Jeanviet - L'informatique pour tous (podcast audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2021 0:35


avec la impression 3d creality ender
Technology Leads Podcast
Corporate social responsibility - CSR (Gast: Rene Speelman)

Technology Leads Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2021 34:35


In deze aflevering hebben we Rene Speelman te gast. Rene is binnen Sogeti verantwoordelijk voor de corporate social responsibility. We hebben het daarom tijdens deze aflevering over wat Sogeti doet hiermee. Zo hebben we het over SogeTrees, wat wij hiervoor doen bij onze klanten en wat dit in de toekomst nog zal betekenen. Daarnaast kunnen de tech updates niet missen: Vliegtuig beter dan trein?! - https://www.bnr.nl/podcast/de-technoloog/10428145/ook-in-de-toekomst-reizen-we-een-uur-per-dag-maar-hoe | Ender-3 V2 3D printer - Creality Ender 3 V2 Official Store, Best DIY 3D Printers for beginners and creators in 2021 – Creality3D Store® Official Store for Creality 3D Printers and Accessories (creality3dofficial.com)

Tech45
#505: Huis-, tuin- en familie ‘equipment’

Tech45

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 73:08


Onderwerpen Het beste of meest opvallende van 2020, volgens het Tech45-panel... Meest opvallende / belangrijkste technieuws → Apples M1-chip & quantum supremacy Hardware-product → Behringer Crave, Osé, smart glasses, TP Link Deco mesh network, Keychron K1, monitor stands, Creality Ender 3 V2 & Clementoni Coding Lab Robomaker Dienst of app → Notion, Disney+, Bergfex touren & Teams Game → Fortnite, Last of Us 2, Tony Hawk 1+2 Film, serie, podcast of boek → The Queen’s Gambit, De Gijzeling van Gladbeck,, Onzichtbare Vrouwen, Years and Years, 50 Koffies, Wind of Change, Rabbit Hole & Tiamath’s wrath, Ted Lasso, Expanse boeken, The Mandalorian, Abonimable, Guitar Nerds Tips Maarten Cox: Gift genius

Computer Talk Radio
Computer Talk Radio Broadcast - 11-21-2020

Computer Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2020 90:02


This week's full broadcast of Computer Talk Radio includes: - 00:00 - Nerd news from the week - Musk, Parler, Apple, DoorDash, Zillow, streaming, and more - 11:00 - Computer Buying Guide - Benjamin spends time freaking out about the lack of options - 22:00 - Changing thoughts on Apple M1 - Keith revisits his assessment of the M1 chip from Apple - 31:00 - Marty Winston's Wisdom - Marty gives guidance on the hustle and bustle of buying tech - 39:00 - Listener Q&A - CAT6 thru house - Benjamin answers Scott about CAT6 drops through new house - 44:00 - Keske on new materials - Steve brings up some interesting new tech driven materials - 56:00 - Christmas Scam tricks to beware - Benjamin covers the scammers tricks for this year - 1:07:00 - Listener Q&A - 3D printing start - Evan asks Benjamin about 3D printing, and Creality Ender 3 - 1:16:00 - Professional IT Series - Benjamin talks of 5S and makes it simple (a clean tech world) - 1:24:00 - Tech can help, but don't push it - Benjamin offers Thanksgiving advice for 2020 politics and Covid

The Dome Runners
Episode 16 - 3D Printing Pt. 1

The Dome Runners

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 61:23


On this episode I go over the basics of 3d printing and talk to another fellow 3d printing novice about getting into the hobby of 3d printing.Online Open War cards BetaMy printers: Creality Ender 3, Elegoo MarsRobert's printer: Creality CR-10Follow the show: Email: thedomerunners@gmail.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/domerunners/@Crimson_Oracle: https://twitter.com/crimson_oracle@DomeRunners: https://twitter.com/domerunners

3d printing creality ender
IMPRINTA.FM
Выпуск #19

IMPRINTA.FM

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2020 70:19


Не смотря ни на что, производство новых моделей 3D принтеров не прекращается. - чем интересны новинки весны 2020 года - кончаются ли у производителей идеи - стоит ли ждать прорыва в индустрии - почему всем нравится Creality Ender-3 - какие проблемы есть у бюджетных принтеров Эти и другие темы обсуждают ведущий Аддитивной кухни Артём Соломников и гость подкаста Артём Родин, основатель инженерно-производственного центра 3D-EX.

3d creality ender
TechtalkRadio
Episode 241 - Printing Into Another Dimension!

TechtalkRadio

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2019 54:10


In this Weeks TechtalkRadio Justin has returned from his trip to Japan. Broadway is out taking care of the wrap up of baseball season with his son. Justin shares some helpful tips about the flight to Japan and traveling with a small child. A tablet for his son really seemed to smooth the flight for him. How has flying changed in the past ten years when traveling? Technology for the traveler comes with options for individual screens with options for TV Shows Movies and Music as well as the ability to see where the flight is at. How does personal devices play into travel, what can you not do? Justin shares some thoughts on a Verizon Travel Pack he purchased for $10 a day with 1GB of Data per day. He recommends maybe looking at another solution. We find out why. Justin and Andy talk about entertainment in Japan and Andy reveals he can't watch movies with Ben Foster because he is Justin's Doppelganger. Andy recently took a look at an Asus C523N Chromebook and was surprised at the performance along with the price of the device. What are some of the misconceptions of the Chromebook and why have they changed since the original Chromebook designs. Andy also looked at the Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus and is amazed at the Wireless Charging features to be able to buddy with another Wireless Charging capable device and charge it. Justin drops a Technology Bombshell, He is now a user of a 3D Printer. Justin talks about the Creality Ender 3 from Creality3D.shop. Justin shares his growing pains with the new printer and what it took to get all put together. The guys talk about the different options and share news from HP, the engineers there recently created a 3D Printable Saxophone sounding instrument. Justin and Andy talk about Avengers End Game and Comic Books. Since Justin is in Denver, He talks about Mile High Comics and why this store is so massive. Andy gets invited to a Season 8 Game of Thrones Viewing party but skips it since he has never seen before. Andy shares a Website of the Week https://www.pixton.com Justin follows up with https://www.thispersondoesnotexist.com A site which features images of people that do not exist, instead created by AI from countless photos. Connect with us on our Social Media sites. Facebook @techtalkers Twitter @TechtalkRadio Instagram techtalkradio Web: TechtalkRadio.Com

Welcome To The Hellmouth
WttH Episode 125 - Same Time, Same Place (S7E03)

Welcome To The Hellmouth

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2019 64:46


David and Michaela get a real spook-em-up with "Same Time, Same Place". This monster of the week ain't messing around, and this episode is kinda plot relevant (almost)! Dawn continues to defend her position as the Queen of Gloss, Buffy is baring her midriff as much as possible: the early 2000's have truly hit. Creality Ender 3 3D printer: https://www.amazon.ca/Creality-3D-Original-Canadian-After-sale/dp/B07BY7P2DD/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1549232296 My Time at Portia: https://store.steampowered.com/app/666140/My_Time_At_Portia/ Pictures on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pg/buffyhellmouthpodcast/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1258120351009359 Contact Us: bienvenue.hellmouth@gmail.com

3d same time gloss same place same time same place creality ender
Geeksleague
Geeksleague 166, LE défi du Colloc

Geeksleague

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2018 109:00


Prenez un beau Colloc, un vélo de course sur rouleau, un fond vert, de la bière et des auditeurs sadiques. Secouez le tout (pas trop fort quand même) et vous aurez le défi du Colloc. Merci à tous les participants en direct pour avoir faire souffrir notre Colloc Pour s'abonner à notre flux RSS Podcast Pour nous soutenir via Tipeee Pour nous écouter sur Dezzer Au sommaire : Les actualité Tech quinzomadaire Le défi du Colloc Surviving Mars l'imprimante Creality Ender 3 Nicky larson Jurassic World Evolution Dragon quizz point Remerciements : À nos tipeurs !! Au Colloc qui a bien tenu ! Pour en savoir plus  : La bande anonce de Nicky Larson      

tech prenez nicky larson creality ender
Bricolagepod
Bricolage Podcast Episode: 12 Becky Stern

Bricolagepod

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2018 47:58


Dominic meets with Becky Stern of Instructables.com and YouTube whilst at Maker Faire in New York. They talk all things making including some tips on how to hoard googly eyes and how Becky’s distraction train derailed and killed a village of Canadians. In this episode of Bricolage I talk with Becky Stern in a noisy cafe at the New York Hall of Science, in Queens during the World Maker Faire event at the end of September 2018. We talk about: The importance of audio quality Tinkercad & online courses Train of thought derailment (killed a village of Canadians) Dominic likes to pioneer new things How do you know Dominic founded a Hackerspace? Don’t worry he’ll tell you… NYC Resistor the Brooklyn based makerspace where Becky is a member Makerbot in Brooklyn found space for NYC Resistor Bree Pettis proto-YouTube-Maker and influence on Becky & Dominic The “Death” Elevator (see Instagram) Instructables (where Becky is product manager) Mini Golf Hole at Figment Festival (Human Cell) NYC Resistor Dead-mans-shoes - invite only “What 3D Printer should I get” question Becky wins a Makerbot Cupcake no:44 Providence AS220 Fablab Make magazine Cupcake article Makerbot Replicator 2 Creality Ender 3 Naomi Wu Becky’s filament box Alex French Guy Cooking with Becky Stern Wintergatan Dominic laments the speed the last 10 years has gone, because he’s a man of a certain age. Early days of Make with Colin Cunningham (an example) Bree goes to ETSY Blip.tv Make YouTube channel Dominic & Becky recall the joy of watching Make’s “Weekend Projects” Bree goes to Other Mill (now Bantam Tools) My Life in New York City Becky is put in a box On making in Brooklyn, New York Rules for not hoarding What is an obscene quantity of googly eyes? Becky’s boyfriend, Smokey Nelson is a cinematographer Project discipline Becky has an extreme personality Laura Kampf (name drop) Amount of content that Becky likes to put out Becky on Instructibles Motorcycle A kid says Hi to Becky Becky’s Vespa Dominic talks about his “Starbucks transaction" theory regards to access to cheap laser cutting, ask on twitter if interested A kid makes a wonderful noise Dean Segovis Hackaweek Alex Bate Pi Zero PeepHole Camera Coping mechanisms for distraction video with Estefanie (explains it all) & Naomi Wu coming up (not published at this point) Vespa project mentioned and linked earlier Becky plays GTA 5 online (and so does Dominic) Optics matter & Becky takes advantage of her privilege to put funny lights on her scooter Scarry spy gadgets from the electronics market in Shenzhen (up coming video) Domestic violence counselors & the internet of things Naomi Wu gives tips on spy gadgets & tastes candies with Becky Estefannie Explains it all The safety trolls You can find more about Becky Stern here: YouTube @Bekathwia Twitter @Bekathwia Instagram Bekathwia on Instructables.com and on her website https://beckystern.com/ You can find out more about this podcast on twitter and instagram linked above Or by following Dominic @ChickenGrylls see a video of the “death” elevator operated by Becky Stern at NYC Resistor! Here.

new york new york city science canadian project train queens starbucks craft maker domestic stern gta internet of things amount cupcake shenzhen vespa maker faire bricolage makerbot resistor instructables tinkercad scarry new york hall laura kampf motorcyles colin cunningham creality ender becky becky world maker faire becky stern nyc resistor alex french guy cooking