Podcasts about Klipper

  • 91PODCASTS
  • 197EPISODES
  • 41mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Mar 14, 2025LATEST

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Best podcasts about Klipper

Latest podcast episodes about Klipper

Fotografiske Signaler
Det vi har mistet og meget mere

Fotografiske Signaler

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 31:13


Jeg fyldte 52 den 3. marts - og det ville ikke være Fotografiske Signaler, hvis ikke det satte præg på denne episode af podcasten. For mig er fødselsdag altid en grund til at se tilbage - og i dette tilfælde førte det mig ind i overvejelser om, hvad jeg mistede da jeg mistede mit elskede studie for 5 år siden. Det handler om betydningen af faciliteter, lokaliteter, udstyr og tid. Men er det egentlig det som flytter os - eller er det en klar intention. En vision for hvad det er vi gerne vil med vores kreativitet - hvad end det så er.Her får du lydudgaven af denne episode af Fotografiske Signaler, men du skal selvfølgelig vide at der, som altid, også er en udgave med video. Den kan du finde på YouTube (søg på Fotografikurser).Men de 52 år og det mistede lokale er kun udgangspunktet. I denne episode kommer det også til at handle om at misbruge (eller miste) muligheden for godt rejsefotografi - uden at have en undskyldning for det. Og så besvarer jeg et lytterspørgsmål om formater.Næste gang udkommer Fotografiske Signaler fredag den 28/3 - og som nævnt i episoden har jeg nogle lektier til lyttere og seere.For det første vil jeg opfordre dig til at se dokumentarfilmen Fotografi på Filmstriben (https://fjernleje.filmstriben.dk/film/2646376900/fotografi). Det er en dokumentar af Steen Møller Rasmussen med tanker fra Keld Helmer-Petersen, Per Bak Jensen, Krass Clement og Kirsten Klein omkring fotografiets natur. Den er god at blive klog af, og mine tanker om den bliver et af emnerne næste gang.Den anden lektie handler om sociale medier. Jeg vil meget gerne have jeres betragtninger om status på sociale medier 2025. Også det bliver nemlig et emne næste gang, men jeg vil gerne finde ud af, om det bare er mig der har en oplevelse af, at bruge det meget anderledes end jeg gjorde for bare et år siden.Et af de steder du kan fortælle mig om det er på vores Slack-workspace. Det kan du blive medlem af her: https://join.slack.com/t/fotografiske...Episoden er optaget på Sony A7SIII og DJI Osmo Pocket 3 og med Røde Go lavalier-mikrofoner. Klipper i Premiere Pro, lydmaster fra Hindenburg.Links:· https://fotografikurser.dk· https://www.instagram.com/fotografikurser.dk/· https://www.instagram.com/adambindslev/· https://bsky.app/profile/adambindslev.bsky.social· https://www.threads.net/@adambindslev· https://expressional.social/@adambindslev This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fotografiskesignaler.substack.com

Viertelpause
Historischer Titel für Klipper! MHC und HTHC ebenfalls Deutscher Meister - die DM der männlichen Jugend

Viertelpause

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 33:33


Historischer Titel für Klipper! MHC und HTHC ebenfalls Deutscher Meister! Die DM der männlichen Jugend ist gespielt und wir haben drei neue Meister! Chris Faust und Sören Wolke besprechen alle Ergebnisse und bringen euch auf den neusten Stand. Dazu gibt es einige News aus der Hockeywelt, ehe in zwei Wochen schon wieder die neue Feldsaison startet! Viel Spaß mit der letzten Folge zur Hallensaison!Seit dem letzten Jahr haben wir die Möglichkeit eingerichtet, unserem Team einen virtuellen Pausentee über die Buy me a Coffee Plattform auszugeben. Hier könnt ihr ganz freiwillig den Podcast supporten. Keine Sorge, natürlich wird Viertelpause weiterhin in seinem normalen Umfang für alle kostenlos und frei zur Verfügung stehen!Folgt uns auf Instagram (@viertelpause_podcast), Facebook (@viertelpause) und TikTok (@viertelpause) und lasst gerne ein Abo sowie euer Feedback zur Folge da. Schreibt uns Eure Meinung zu dieser Folge!Support the show

Tilbake til fremtiden
#164 - Buffy, Grimm, Goonies, Kingdom Come og Doom… IGJEN!!

Tilbake til fremtiden

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2025 106:01


Fy fader... her sitter jeg altså... på en tirsdag. Klipper episode. Whisky i glasset. Barna sover. God tid. Gode vibes. God stemning! Kos dere like mye som jeg koser meg nå! Prekast! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Fotografiske Signaler
Svar til Rene, lyset vender tilbage og tanker om reportagefoto

Fotografiske Signaler

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2025 34:05


OK - jeg starter året med ikke at holde kadencen .. helt. For jeg ville gerne være udkommet mandag i denne uge, men så må det jo bliver onsdag/torsdag … fordi nogen gange så er livet bare i vejen, og ting er ikke som de burde være. Det er vel mere eller mindre standarden for denne podcast. Her får du lydudgaven af denne episode af Fotografiske Signaler, men du skal selvfølgelig vide at der, som altid, også er en udgave med video. Den kan du finde på YouTube (søg på Fotografikurser).Størstedelen af denne podcast går med et svar til Rene, som har været så venlig at sende spørgsmål til Fotografiske Signaler. Det er en kæmpe fornøjelse at kunne svare på jeres spørgsmål - så derfor bruger jeg også god tid på det. Så det kommer til at handle om filformater, objektiver, cropfaktor og min foretrukne optik. Så ja … en anelse teknisk, en anelse nørdet, men hey - det er der altså også plads til.Og så har jeg været ude for at lave lidt eventfotografi. Jeg deler mine tanker omkring det at fotografere fra kulissen, noget som jeg oplever at mange fotografer holder af, men ikke altid har det nemt med at gøre. Så her er nogle af mine tips.Og så er det ellers om personlige produktive rum og lyset der vender tilbage. It's all good. Vil du være medlem af vores Slack-workspace på Fotografiske Signaler – så finder du det her: https://join.slack.com/t/fotografiske...Episoden er optaget på Sony A7IV og DJI Osmo Pocket 3 og med Røde Go lavalier-mikrofoner. Klipper i Premiere Pro, lydmaster fra Hindenburg.Links:· https://fotografikurser.dk· https://www.instagram.com/fotografikurser.dk/· https://www.instagram.com/adambindslev/· https://bsky.app/profile/adambindslev.bsky.social· https://www.threads.net/@adambindslev· https://expressional.social/@adambindslev This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fotografiskesignaler.substack.com

Fotografiske Signaler
Gråvejr, Pixelfed og firmware

Fotografiske Signaler

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 23:42


Hej - Adam her ... Dette er Fotografiske Signaler – en eksistentiel-fotografisk podcast fra Fotografikurser. Det er januar, det er gråt og det er faktisk også ret koldt. Men det skal ikke være nogen undskyldning for ikke at fotografere - eller for ikke at optage et afsnit af Fotografiske Signaler. Ligesom sidst er det både en lydpodcast og en video. Så hvis du hellere vil se mig end kun at lytte så find den på Fotografikurser's Youtube-kanal.I denne episode er jeg taget til Ebeltoft i et desperat forsøg på at finde farver i alt det grå. Det bliver til en snak om at prøve at bryde ud af en rutine. Og det handler det også om når vi skal se på det "nye" sociale netværk Pixelfed (det er nemlig ikke helt så nyt, men det har bare fået meget opmærksomhed i den sidste tid - og det er nyt for mig). Du kan læse mere om pixelfed på https://pixelfed.org og du kan finde min profil på https://pixelfed.dk/adambindslevVil du være medlem af vores Slack-workspace på Fotografiske Signaler – så finder du det her: https://join.slack.com/t/fotografiske... Episoden er optaget på Sony A7IV og DJI Osmo Pocket 3 og med Røde Go lavalier-mikrofoner. Klipper i Premiere Pro, lydmaster fra Hindenburg.Links:· https://fotografikurser.dk · https://www.instagram.com/fotografikurser.dk/· https://www.instagram.com/adambindslev/· https://bsky.app/profile/adambindslev.bsky.social· https://www.threads.net/@adambindslev· https://expressional.social/@adambindslev This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fotografiskesignaler.substack.com

Auf den Tag genau
Hockey in Hamburg

Auf den Tag genau

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 8:33


Harvestehuder THC, Uhlenhorster HC, Club an der Alster und Klipper – die dominierenden Hamburger Hockeyclubs, entnehmen wir dem Hamburger Anzeiger vom 14. Januar 1925, hörten schon vor einhundert Jahren auf dieselben Namen wie heute. Und damals wie heute, erfahren wir weiter, erfreute sich das Hockeyspiel in der Hansestadt großer Beliebtheit. Davon dass es von Anfang an nicht zuletzt die besser gebildeten Stände waren, die mit dem Schäferstock dem Ball nachjagden, künden mehrere Doktortitel, die die im Artikel genannten Spielernamen zieren. Dennoch macht sich der Autor einige Sorgen, dass rauere Umgangsformen aus dem Fußballspiel nach dem Hockey überschwappen könnten. Obwohl Hockey als eine der wenigen Ballsportarten seinerzeit auch schon von Frauen praktiziert wurde, berichtet der Text darüber leider nichts. Weiblich ist nur die Stimme, die ihn für uns liest, es ist die von Rosa Leu.

Fotografiske Signaler
Projekter, Fuji XT-50, Perfect Days og old-school film

Fotografiske Signaler

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2024 37:26


God jul og godt nytår! Dette er Fotografiske Signaler – den eksistentiel-fotografiske podcast fra Fotografikurser. Vi er kommet til slutningen af 2024, og det er tid til årets sidste episode af Fotografiske Signaler. Men noget er anderledes. For det her er både den sidste episode i 2024 – og den allerførste der også er en video! Hvis du tænker ”Den vil jeg da gerne se”, så er det ganske let at komme til. Du kan nemlig finde den her: - og du kan finde fremtidige video-podcasts og andre videoer fra Fotografikurser.dk på https://www.youtube.com/@FotografikurserDkDenne episode dykker ned i kendte temaer for Fotografiske Signaler. En del eksistentiel angst, en del kritik af tingenes tilstand, et blik på inspirerende kunst og sågar også noget om kameraer. Det handler om kvantitative projekter, om at skabe noget som gør en forskel, at holde det smukke for sig selv og meget andet.I episoden taler jeg om filmen Perfect Days – den kan ses her: https://fjernleje.filmstriben.dk/film/9000006761/perfect-days (kræver login til Filmstriben)Jeg snakker også om Bill Wadman og hans projekt. Følg ham på Instagram her: https://www.instagram.com/billwadman/Vil du være medlem af vores Slack-workspace på Fotografiske Signaler – så finder du det her: https://join.slack.com/t/fotografiskesignaler/shared_invite/zt-1xaphbxhs-fduwyIs_wH5o2EWx4q2CiAEpisoden er optaget på Sony A7S III, DJI Osmo Pocket 3, Fuji XT-50 og med Røde Go lavalier-mikrofoner. Klipper i Premiere Pro, lydmaster fra Hindenburg.Links:· https://fotografikurser.dk· https://www.instagram.com/fotografikurser.dk/· https://www.instagram.com/adambindslev/· https://bsky.app/profile/adambindslev.bsky.social· https://www.threads.net/@adambindslev· https://expressional.social/@adambindslev This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fotografiskesignaler.substack.com

Ledelse med vilje
Forsvarschefen lærte som jægersoldat aldrig at give op: ”Det handler om viljen til at sejre. Og altid blive ved”

Ledelse med vilje

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2024 40:48


Siden han var 20 har Michael Hyldgaard vidst, hvad han ville med sit liv. Han går fortsat på arbejde hver dag for at forsvare kongeriget og det danske demokrati. Nu skal han som ny forsvarschef stå for genopretningen af det noget forhutlede danske forsvar. Klipper og producer: Mads G. Ladekarl. Musik: Christian Schødts-Sørensen Programmet er produceret af R*******k Productions for Lederstof.dk, som udgives af Lederne. Læs mere på www.lederstof.dk

Perfect First Layer Podcast
Cloud Printing Apps, Modding a Fusion3 F410, Filament Calibration and MORE!!!

Perfect First Layer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2024 58:34


This Episodes Questions: Hey guys! Long time listener, first time caller! I recently took home an old(ish) Fusion3 F410. (Our department at work wanted to get rid of it.) We also have a Raise3d Pro3, BambuLab X1C and X1E, so this thing is a real pain to use in comparison. About the only good thing it has going for it is the big build volume (355x355x315), other than that there are a couple of annoyances: - Glass build plate - Auto bed-leveling is hit or miss. It only probes the 4 corners where aluminum tape is used for conductivity. - Reaaally long Bowden tube setup - Weird kevlar string used for the X-Y motion system.. but I guess it works. - Old Duet2 board and RepRap software - Discontinued by Fusion3 I volunteered to take it home because I have some ideas! I want to see if I can breath new life into it with some mods: - Magnetic PEI build plate - Direct-drive extruder on the toolhead - BigTreeTech control board and Klipper Do you guys have any suggestions on how to get the above mods done? I'm not too familiar with Voron printers, but I wonder how much I can pull from their large-format printers as far as parts, electronics used, etc. I can design/print custom part solutions if needed, and have access to sheet metal for the bed. I also have some experience with Klipper, and I think getting that properly configured will be an undertaking on its own. Thanks! Matt Hi guys,I recently stumbled over your podcast and really like the bandwidth of topics you guys talk about! Currently I own 2x K1 Max but will soon replace 1 of them by a K2 Plus. You guys are talking a lot about creating your own configuration settings for materials and such. I would really like to know how should someone approach this systematically. Let's imagine I have Creality print 5.1 ;-) which is splitting all settings on one side to a Filament setting and on the other side to the different layer height configurations. Lately I had a standard PLA - which caused problems - and ended up by changing the temperature in the Filament settings and the max speed in the layer height configuration. This solved the problem but I will never have just one setting to load for this material. So now there are actually two questions: - How to approach a perfect setting for a material (and height) systematically? - Any tips and tricks for Creality Print 5.1 on how to manage multiple settings? Thanks a lot and keep up the good work! Michael from Switzerland

DLN Xtend
199: Fedora Surprises and Nostalgic Delights | Linux Out Loud 101

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2024 76:44


In Linux Out Loud episode 101, the hosts mix nostalgia with tech upgrades! Matt dives into retro gaming with his Alienware Alpha, sparking laughs, while the team debates package managers like DNF and APT. Nate shares a big switch to SUSE Harvester at work, and Wendy tackles 3D printer hot bed challanges. The team even goes a bit gaming crazy! From retro buys and Linux insights to DIY Christmas lights, it's a lively blend of tech tips, gaming talk, and holiday cheer! Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-101/ Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

Aktiv Prat
Hvilepuls, gutta klipper tungebånd og ni***s in the house

Aktiv Prat

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 106:36


Gaute har hvilepuls og Baas kommer med en oppdatering angående dating-situasjonen sin. Hva er den beste bioen å skrive på tinder? Er det innafor å tisse i dusjen på treningssentre? Hva gjør man når en i kollektivet stjeler mat, og en av våre bukseløse har et lapdance-problem. Anonymt skjema for innsendelser: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://forms.gle/5uT5rpWAFwgQd5JaA

Attitudes!
Judge Robert McBurney, Gage Klipper, Dog Psychic and MyWay

Attitudes!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 57:34


Bryan is starting his own private insurance company (with many prerequisites before joining), and Erin shares details about her recent pet psychic call, and a neighbor who brings horses over to eat grass and a dog food eating child. Erin discusses Judge Robert McBurney who struck down the Georgia's six week abortion ban under HB 481, and Bryan is confounded by MAGA men's obsession with JD VanceSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Hackaday Podcast
Ep 287: Raspberry Pi Woes, Blacker than Black, and Printing with Klipper

Hackaday Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 65:14


Elliot Williams is back from vacation, and he and Al Williams got together to talk about the best Hackaday posts from the last week. Of course, the Raspberry Pi RP2350 problem generated a bit of discussion. On a lighter note, they saw laser lawn care, rooting WiFi devices, and some very black material made from wood. Need more current-sinking capability from a 555? They talked about that, too, along with a keyboard you use with your feet. The guys had a lot to say about Klipper, why you might want to move your 3D printer to it, and the FCC's stance on ham radio antennas in restricted neighborhoods. Oh, and don't forget to play "What's that Sound?"  

Hair Talks
Hårtransplantationer, behandlingar och håravfall

Hair Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 45:21


Klipper du herrar kan du räkna med att häften av dem förr eller senare kommer att tappa sitt hår.I takt med att hårtransplantationer och hårbehandlingar blir allt vanligare kan det vara bra för dig som frisör att veta vad som gäller när kunden börjar fråga. I veckans avsnitt får du chansen att få svar på det mesta då Gustaf Bodin; ägare och grundare av sveriges första hårklinik gästar podden för att ge oss svar på frågorna och reda ut begreppen - Välkomna!  Denna podd ges ut av Frisörföretagarna.

Clearoundpodden's Podcast
Episode 138: Klipper du av ditt snöre varje dag ?

Clearoundpodden's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 90:37


Os Spaning.Rotterdam genrep .Vilka rider os i laget och indv ?Manligt dilemma.Förstärk din häst egenskaper.Midsommar på bortaplan.Och mycket mer. 

DET SIDSTE MÅLTID
Morten Hee Andersen

DET SIDSTE MÅLTID

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024 56:25


Skuespiller Morten Hee Andersen fik sit gennembrud i DR-serien 'Herrens Veje'. Siden har karrieren budt på bærende roller i tv-serierne 'Sygeplejeskeskolen' og 'Carmen Curlers'. Han har medvirket i en række storfilm og været en fast del af ensemblet på Det Kongelige Teater. I 'Det sidste måltid' fortæller han at til trods for den flotte karrierer, har tvivlen altid været en følgesvend og at der med medvind også følger en nervøsitet over, om han kommer til at ødelægge det hele. Mens Morten Hee Andersen spiser sit sidste måltid, der består af melonsalat med Iberico skinke, pasta i et gigantisk ostehjul og gammeldags vaffelis, fortæller han om sit forhold til tro. Når han skal se tilbage på sit levede liv, vil han gerne se tilbage på de tidspunkter, hvor livet var magisk. Det var det blandt andet, da han stod på skateboard på parkeringspladsen ved Føtex i Nyborg, på en sommerdag på vej efter is med familien, og da hans spansklærer fra Nyborg Gymnasium tog ham med på skinkemuseet i Madrid. Nekrologen i programmet er skrevet på baggrund af artikler fra Skive Folkeblad, Elle, Avisen.dk, Soundvenue, Ugeavisen.dk, DR.DK, Politiken, Se & Hør, Kristeligt Dagblad og Berlingske. Vært: Lærke Kløvedal. Kok: Luna Hjerming. Klipper og producer: Asbjørn Kjærgaard Pedersen. Tilrettelægger: Anna-Paludan Müller. Redaktør: Michelle Mølgaard Andersen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

DET SIDSTE MÅLTID
Lone Hørslev

DET SIDSTE MÅLTID

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2024 56:04


Fransk æblekage, islagkage og jordbær med koldskål. Lone Hørslev er kendt som forfatter, digter, sangskriver og sanger - og er den første, der har bestilt tre desserter i Det Sidste Måltid. Hun er aktuel med bogudgivelsen 'Svømmende, rygende, grædende,' hvor det er begæret efter alkohol, der er i centrum hos romanens hovedperson, Anna. Forfatteren beretter ærligt om, hvordan afhængighed af alkohol også har fyldt i hendes eget liv, og hvorfor hun er begyndt at tænke mere over, hvad hun putter i sin mund, efter hun selv er stoppet med at drikke. Det nye liv uden alkohol har haft den pris for Lone Hørslev. Det er slut med at tage ud med musikere og læse sine digte op, da det er forbundet med at dulme nervøsiteten inden hun gik på scenen og belønningen bagefter. Det er nyt for hende at søge det søde – som hun forbinder med barndommens og livets banale glæder. I nekrologen er der citeret fra: Forfatterweb, Information, Politiken, Jyllands-Posten, Kristeligt Dagblad, Alt for Damerne, Nordvest, Hus Forbi, Ud&Se og Fyens Stiftstidende. Vært: Lærke Kløvedal. Kok: Jonas Frank. Klipper og producer: Asbjørn Kjærgaard Pedersen. Tilrettelægger: Anna-Paludan Müller. Redaktør: Michelle Mølgaard AndersenSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

DET SIDSTE MÅLTID
Lars Ranthe

DET SIDSTE MÅLTID

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2024 56:27


Han er en af Danmarks mest anerkendte og mest anvendte skuespillere og har været med over 80 film- og tv-produktioner, men er måske bedst kendt for rollerne i Badehotellet, Sommer, Jagten, Dirch og Druk. I Det sidste måltid taler Lars Ranthe om taknemmelighed, om glæden ved at være til og glæden ved at være dansker – ligesom menuen er præget af stor, dansk sommer. Lars Ranthe er ugens gæst i Det sidste måltid. Nekrologen er skrevet på baggrund af artikler særligt fra Ud & Se 2024 og Berlingske 2013. Derudover er der anvendt artikler fra Her & Nu 2023, Avisen.dk 2023, Woman 2023, Midtjyllands Avis 2020, Alt for damerne 2023, Kristeligt Dagblad 2019, Midtjyllands Avis 2023, Århus Stiftstidende 2018, B.T. 2024, TV2 2018, GAFFA 2022, Newsner 2023, Soundvenue 2018, Berlingske 2019, Politiken 2012 & Politiken 2019 og Fyens Stiftstidende 2022. Vært: Lærke Kløvedal. Kok: Luna Hjerming. Klipper og producer: Asbjørn Kjærgaard Pedersen. Tilrettelægger: Anna-Paludan Müller. Redaktør: Michelle Mølgaard Andersen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Säg Det Bara
#127. Män som inte klipper navelsträngen

Säg Det Bara

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 51:56


I veckans avsnitt diskuterar vi vems ansvar det är att säga pauze när ens föräldrar behandlar ens äkta baby dåligt, ifall mamas-boys kan växa ifrån sitt beteende, hur man kan tolka ”att vara kär” olika och hur skillnader i kärleksspråken kan va en källa till otacksamhet och frustration i en relation, hur svenska partier är försiktiga med att inte ta tydlig ställning under det pågående folkmordet, mäns vy under doggy, vår första princess-treatment och mycket mer.Glöm inte att följa oss på TikTok och Instagram @Sagdetbara samt @Sdbevents för att ha koll på sommarens kommande eventSupport till showen http://supporter.acast.com/sagdetbara. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jobba Jobba Jobba
208. Fredrik Wass om sjön (havet) och kommunikation

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 64:11


Fredrik Wass gästar podden för att prata om hans jobb som fartygsbefäl och hans olika jobb/uppdrag inom kommunikation.  Innehåll: Sjö och båtliv Podden dejtinghaveri Nyhetsbrev och konvertering Åsikter istället för nyheter Trender   Besök gärna hans hemsida här: https://www.fredrikwass.se/   Följ podden på instagram: @jobba.jobba.jobba   Klipper gör Marcus Tigerdraake.

Jobba Jobba Jobba
207. Politik och företagande med Benjamin Dousa

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 54:55


Benjamin Dousa gästar återigen podden för att prata om hans nya jobb som VD på Företagarna. Han har sedan sist hunnit vara VD på Timbro, fått barn och gjort en turné på Företagarna runt om i Sverige. Lyssna på hur Benjamin resonerar om företagens olika villkor och vilka förändringar han skulle vilja se och jobbar för ska ske.    Klipper gör Marcus Tigerdraake   Följ gärna podden på instagram @jobba.jobba.jobba

Jobba Jobba Jobba
205. Sport och fritid med William Valkeaoja

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2024 62:14


William och Elin har ett avslappnat samtal om fritid, jobb och sidoprojekt. William har i vanlig ordning producerat nya böcker som avhandlas.    Williams böcker Spring mer: https://tyngre.se/ovrigt/bocker/spring-mer-bli-en-battre-lopare Sprint smart: https://tyngre.se/ovrigt/bocker/spring-smart-lar-dig-springa-smartare  Träna mindre: https://tyngre.se/ovrigt/bocker/trana-mindre-historien-om-varfor-lite-traning-kan-gora-stor-nytta-om-du-tar-i  Tyra och tankarna: https://tyngre.se/ovrigt/bocker/tyra-och-tankarna    Följ gärna podden på instragram @jobba.jobba.jobba   Klipper gör Marcus Tigerdraake

The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!
Ep. 39: Ankur Verma of 3DUnplugged + DAKSH: The ToolChangers Are Coming...

The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024 61:23


In this video we're joined by Ankur Verma of 3DUnplugged and the DAKSH toolchanger project. Brought to you by PCBWay. Register at https://jle.vi/pcbway and get a $5 welcome bonus!Starting off by building his (and India's first) Voron 2.4 printer in the pandemic days, Ankur has been involved in exploring multi-material 3D printing over the last few years. His first foray into this exciting and challenging world was the IDEX Switchwire printer with two independent heads in 2022 - the first one to bring Hybrid CoreXY/CoreXZ kinematics into Klipper.Shifting his focus next to the multi-headed tool changer ecosystem, he designed and released the WP-DAKSH V1 Tool Changer with six independent tool heads. It utilized an innovative servo-based locking mechanism along with 3D printed parts to deliver a reliable and fast tool changer experience.The latest release from him, DAKSH V2 Tool Changer, further brings down the tool change time from v1's 9 seconds to an ultra-fast sub-4 seconds, while adding to the reliability and fast printing aspects. DAKSH V2 Tool Changer is also fully mechanical without the need for a servo or motor-based locking mechanism and can be fully assembled using only 3D printed parts and off-the-shelf components, bypassing the need for machined parts.A software engineer by training, he has also been working on incorporating intelligence into the multi-material printing workflow with predictive toolhead management and error detection systems built into the DAKSH Tool Changer.

Jobba Jobba Jobba
204. Svaret på vad vi får för pengarna med Alice Hallman

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 48:16


Alice Hallman, dr i nationalekonomi, gästar podden för att prata om hennes kärlek till nationalekonomi. Elin och Alice pratar om hennes avhandling inom spelteori.  Alice jobbar på Kunskapsverket och de har nyligen publicerat rapporten "Vad går skattepengarna till?" vilket hon har svar på!   Länk till Kunskapsverkets rapporten: https://www.kunskapsverket.org/artiklar/vad-gar-skattepengarna-till   Följ gärna podden på @jobba.jobba.jobba Klipper gör Marcus Silverdraake

Jobba Jobba Jobba
202. Freddy Jönsson Hanberg om totalförsvar

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 45:28


Freddy Jönsson Hanberg besökte podden för att främst prata om hans bok Totalförsvar för chefer. Samtalet handlar också om NATO, energiförsörjning och vad beredskap egentligen är och varför det berör oss.    Länk till hans hemsida: www.freddy.nu  Boken hittar ni här: https://www.adlibris.com/se/bok/totalforsvar-for-chefer-9789189323971    Följ gärna podden på instagram @jobba.jobba.jobba Klipper gör @marcustigerdraake

Jobba Jobba Jobba
201. Johan Grant om att vilja ha allt och inte det som är dåligt

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2024 65:08


Johan Grant är organisationspsykolog och samtalet handlar om kultur på arbetsplatsen, om ledarideal och hur en bra medarbetarundersökning skulle kunna utformas.    Johans hemsida: https://www.johangrant.se/   Följ gärna poddens instagram @jobba.jobba.jobba Klipper gör @marcustigerdraake

Jobba Jobba Jobba
200. Jens Falk om F1 och Drive to Survive

Jobba Jobba Jobba

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2024 68:56


Det 200:e avsnittet är här! Minimalt jobbsnack utlovas! Jens Falk - komiker, poddare och F1-expert gästar podden för att prata om Formula 1. Elin kollar inte på loppen eller på sport överhuvudtaget, men har följt serien vilket gör att hon vill prata om skillnaden är mellan sporten och serien.    Följ gärna Jens Falk på instagram @jensfalk_ Följ poddens instagram @jobba.jobba.jobba Klipper gör @marcustigerdraake

Scales N Tales
Episode 132 Steven Klipper

Scales N Tales

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2024 94:12


Joined with a man across the border, Steven joins us for the first time in ~15 months. And boy oh boy, we've got a lot to catch up on. Believe it or not he's got even more wild stories and thoughts then the last time he was on. Stevens socials: IG: Steven_klipper_bass_fishing YT: Liam Loves Life Fishing with Dad - Episode 1 https://youtu.be/_dBLMMw2bt0?si=sMXDM4cqqawp0DXq Check out Leviathan Rods, and use code scales20 at check out for 20% off all your rod purchases! ⁠⁠https://www.leviathanrods.com⁠ ⁠  Check out the new official SNT tackle shop sponsor, Lake Pro Tackle! Use code "SCALES" at checkout for 15% off your order of any conventional or Swimbait-related products! ⁠https://lakeprotackle.com/⁠   Pro Bass Adventures Mexico is the only company with lodges on both Lake El Salto and Lake Lake Baccarac in western Mexico. More 10+ pound monster bass have consistently been caught from these two lakes than anywhere else on earth. If you are considering a Mexico bass fishing trip, look no further.  ⁠https://www.mexicofishing.net/index.html  Meat Crafters is now offering 10% off their site when you use code SCALESNSLICES at checkout! This is small batch meat made with immense quality and attention to detail. My favorite product of theirs so far is the Raging Brats! Made with real local brewed IPA and fresh ingredients to complement the whole Brat, it's no surprise why this is my favorite! ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.meatcrafters.com/⁠⁠⁠ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sntpod/support

Perfect First Layer Podcast
3D Printing News, Clogged Nozzles, Klipper on K1 and MORE!!!

Perfect First Layer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 47:34


This Episodes Questions: Another dedicated aussie listener, hey guys, thanks for a great podcast. My question is, I recently purchased a K1 Max, not many issues except hot end blockages 3 in as many weeks, it's even causing under extrusion and have to disassemble the hot end to clear it out, thing is it seems to line the inside just above the nozzle which seems impossible to clear, any advice would be much appreciated, is it me the way I'm changing filament or is it an issue with the printer? Thanks in advance Roy My question is about the new K1 firmware hack provided by crealitys outlet on giithub, is it worth the risk? I've been doing the yards in checking and researching, but cannot other than maybe a couple of issues from people on Reddit I have around 3 years experience in 3d printing so have some knowledge thanks to your podcast, great listening Roy Hi. I have an Ender 3 V2 Neo, and the bed is in very bad condition and the prints are not sticking well, while i wait for a new bed i want to ask, can i use lacquer on my bed (I don't know which type is it)? Thanks, Noa

c't uplink (HD-Video)
3D-Drucker: So durchschaut ihr übertriebene Werte schon vor dem Kauf | c't uplink

c't uplink (HD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2023


Man kann richtig schnelle 3D-Drucker kaufen wie den Babulab X1C, P1P den Creality K1 oder den Quidi X-Max 3. Alle werben mit Beschleunigungen bis 20.000 mm/s². Mit diesen Beschleunigungen können sie aber vor allem eins: So stark rütteln, dass die Drucke unbenutzbar werden. In sinnvollen Druckprofilen beschleunigen sie eher mit 7000 bis 9000 mm/s² und drucken dann aber auch nutzbare Teile aus. An den realen Werten erkennt man dann auch, dass die Drucker mit gleich hohen Angaben im Datenblatt dann doch nicht gleich gut konstruiert sind. Für Käufer ist es da schwierig, den besten Drucker auszuwählen. Für den Uplink haben wir uns @MattThePrintingNerd ins Studio geholt, der mit dem The 100 den schnellsten 3D-Drucker mit Plastikrahmen konstruiert hat (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0K9NM08S0IA). Er hat einen Bumbulab-X1C testweise mit Klipper betrieben und so getestet, welche realen Beschleunigungen auf der gekauften Hardware möglich sind. Der Test zeigt: Bambulab hat vieles richtig gemacht. Aber trotzdem sollte man genau hinsehen und sich nicht von hohen Zahlen ablenken lassen. Im Gespräch mit Pina Merkert, die mit ihrem The 100 mit Gehäuse (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNNL7Cl7GKg) respektable 6:23 bei der #speedboatrace gebraucht hat (Matt hat 3:03 geschafft), erklärt der Speed-Printing-Experte, wie man fürs Datenblatt geschönte Beschleunigungswerte durchschaut und richtig schnelle FDM-3D-Drucker erkennt. #3dprinting #the100 #speedprinting

c’t uplink
3D-Drucker: So durchschaut ihr übertriebene Werte schon vor dem Kauf | c't uplink

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2023 49:50


Man kann richtig schnelle 3D-Drucker kaufen wie den Babulab X1C, P1P den Creality K1 oder den Quidi X-Max 3. Alle werben mit Beschleunigungen bis 20.000 mm/s². Mit diesen Beschleunigungen können sie aber vor allem eins: So stark rütteln, dass die Drucke unbenutzbar werden. In sinnvollen Druckprofilen beschleunigen sie eher mit 7000 bis 9000 mm/s² und drucken dann aber auch nutzbare Teile aus. An den realen Werten erkennt man dann auch, dass die Drucker mit gleich hohen Angaben im Datenblatt dann doch nicht gleich gut konstruiert sind. Für Käufer ist es da schwierig, den besten Drucker auszuwählen. Für den Uplink haben wir uns @MattThePrintingNerd ins Studio geholt, der mit dem The 100 den schnellsten 3D-Drucker mit Plastikrahmen konstruiert hat (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0K9NM08S0IA). Er hat einen Bumbulab-X1C testweise mit Klipper betrieben und so getestet, welche realen Beschleunigungen auf der gekauften Hardware möglich sind. Der Test zeigt: Bambulab hat vieles richtig gemacht. Aber trotzdem sollte man genau hinsehen und sich nicht von hohen Zahlen ablenken lassen. Im Gespräch mit Pina Merkert, die mit ihrem The 100 mit Gehäuse (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNNL7Cl7GKg) respektable 6:23 bei der #speedboatrace gebraucht hat (Matt hat 3:03 geschafft), erklärt der Speed-Printing-Experte, wie man fürs Datenblatt geschönte Beschleunigungswerte durchschaut und richtig schnelle FDM-3D-Drucker erkennt.

c't uplink (SD-Video)
3D-Drucker: So durchschaut ihr übertriebene Werte schon vor dem Kauf | c't uplink

c't uplink (SD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2023


Man kann richtig schnelle 3D-Drucker kaufen wie den Babulab X1C, P1P den Creality K1 oder den Quidi X-Max 3. Alle werben mit Beschleunigungen bis 20.000 mm/s². Mit diesen Beschleunigungen können sie aber vor allem eins: So stark rütteln, dass die Drucke unbenutzbar werden. In sinnvollen Druckprofilen beschleunigen sie eher mit 7000 bis 9000 mm/s² und drucken dann aber auch nutzbare Teile aus. An den realen Werten erkennt man dann auch, dass die Drucker mit gleich hohen Angaben im Datenblatt dann doch nicht gleich gut konstruiert sind. Für Käufer ist es da schwierig, den besten Drucker auszuwählen. Für den Uplink haben wir uns @MattThePrintingNerd ins Studio geholt, der mit dem The 100 den schnellsten 3D-Drucker mit Plastikrahmen konstruiert hat (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0K9NM08S0IA). Er hat einen Bumbulab-X1C testweise mit Klipper betrieben und so getestet, welche realen Beschleunigungen auf der gekauften Hardware möglich sind. Der Test zeigt: Bambulab hat vieles richtig gemacht. Aber trotzdem sollte man genau hinsehen und sich nicht von hohen Zahlen ablenken lassen. Im Gespräch mit Pina Merkert, die mit ihrem The 100 mit Gehäuse (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNNL7Cl7GKg) respektable 6:23 bei der #speedboatrace gebraucht hat (Matt hat 3:03 geschafft), erklärt der Speed-Printing-Experte, wie man fürs Datenblatt geschönte Beschleunigungswerte durchschaut und richtig schnelle FDM-3D-Drucker erkennt. #3dprinting #the100 #speedprinting

Hvad drikker Lillelund?
162: Hvad Drikker Lillelund? Dovers hvide klipper

Hvad drikker Lillelund?

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 36:14


Vine: La Chablisienne - La Pierrelée 2020- 140 kr. (v/ 6 fl.) Philipson Jean Collet&Fils Chablis 2022 – 199 kr. tilbud hos wine.dk Louis Jadot – Chapalle au Lupe – Chablis 2022 – 200 kr. hos Kjær&Sommerfeldt Domaine Vrignaud - Chablis 1er Cru Fourchaume les Vaupulans 2018 “Georges Deschamps” – 279 kr. tilbud hos Vinimondo La Chablisienne – 1er Cru Grande Cuvée 2017 - 200 kr. (v/ 6 fl.) Philipson

DLN Xtend
165: Set It and Forget It | Linux Out Loud 68

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2023 70:32


This week, Linux Out Loud chats about Linux as the Ultimate set it and forget it appliance OS. Welcome to episode 68 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introductions 00:02:33 Wendy 3D Printer Success 00:11:35 Warehouse Pi4s 00:17:42 Matt Installs Garuda Again 00:29:08 Linode Ad 00:30:17 Set It and Forget It 00:47:26 Bitwarden Ad 00:48:47 Phasmophobia 00:57:56 Sprite Extruder 01:02:44 Nuroum Webcam 01:09:03 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-68/ Our sponsor: - Linode - http://linode.com/tux - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

DLN Xtend
164: The Compromise of Easy | Linux Out Loud 67

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 61:10


This week, Linux Out Loud chats about rolling your own solutions for privacy. Welcome to episode 67 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:01:02 Minisforum V2 2-in-1 00:12:16 3D Printer Mainboard 00:18:48 Framework Guts 00:25:06 The Compromise of Easy 00:46:59 Game Sphere 00:51:18 Listener Feedback 00:54:04 Wayland 00:56:44 The Image 01:00:03 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-67/ Our sponsor: - Linode - http://linode.com/tux - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

DLN Xtend
162: Immutable File Systems | Linux Out Loud 65

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2023 65:50


This week, Linux Out Loud chats about yay or nay for immutable file systems. Welcome to episode 65 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:03:27 Graphics Tablets 00:11:51 Framework Laptop 00:16:15 Torx Screws 00:22:37 Immutable File Systems 00:46:55 3D Printer Update 00:54:13 Solar Down 00:57:33 Game of the Week 01:04:21 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-65/ Our sponsor: - Linode - http://linode.com/tux - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!
Ep. 14: OctoApp Developer Christian Wuerthner on the Future of 3D Printing Software

The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 60:51


This episode is brought to you by Sovol, creators of the amazing SV07 Klipper. Check it out at https://jle.vi/sovol and use coupon code NEXTLAYER to save $10-20 off on orders of $259 or more. Today's guest, Christian Wuerthner, is an app developer, hobby maker, 3D print enthusiast and creator of OctoApp. In this episode, we'll talk about smartphone apps, Klipper vs. Octoprint, and much more. Tune in live to ask YOUR questions!

DLN Xtend
161: Linux Workflow | Linux Out Loud 64

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 64:45


This week, Linux Out Loud chats about our Linux workflow. Welcome to episode 64 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:00:40 Installing Linux 00:06:42 3D Printer Mainboards 00:20:17 Linux Workflow 00:44:16 WSL openSUSE 00:47:00 Game of the Week 00:53:36 Look Another Game 00:03:12 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-64/ Our sponsor: - Linode - http://linode.com/tux - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

Podcast Živě
Týden Živě: Souboj Garminů. Krásný displej vs. cena a výdrž. Plus nová česká 3D tiskárna a není od Průši

Podcast Živě

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 26:13


Do redakce nám dorazila nová česká 3D tiskárna PWS400K, která oproti ostatním staví na open source projektu Klipper. Messenger končí na hodinkách od Applu. Elon Musk zase něco slibuje a víme, jestli čtete návody (moc ne).Také srovnáme dvojici sportovních hodinek od Garminu: Instinct 2X Solar a Forerunner 965. Každé jsou jiné a mají své trumfy i slabiny. Upřednostníte nádherné animace na pestrém OLED panelu, nebo vám stačí „černobílý“ displej v hodinkách, které stojí výrazně méně peněz a vydrží nabité déle než měsíc?00:28 – Česká 3D tiskárna PWS 400K03:30 – Messenger končí na hodinkách04:46 – Virtuální influencerka06:26 – Váš hlas z textu v iOS07:49 – Elon Musk slibuje 10:05 – Garmin Instinct 2X Solar vs. Forerunner 96524:36 – Čtete návody?Týden Živě je diskuzní pořad redaktorů webů Živě.cz a MobilMania.cz, ve kterých rozebírají zajímavá témata týkající se počítačů, internetu, mobilních a jiných technologií. Sledovat ho můžete také jako video. Vychází každý týden.

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.

Fotballklubben
322 Neil Warnock klipper tånegler

Fotballklubben

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2023 53:13


Joaquin legger opp og Thomas Berntsen drar til Sverige, men likevel er nok det at Neil Warnock klipte tåneglene til Darren Ambrose det mest forstyrrende vi har hørt denne uka. I Finland møter FC FC klubben Strikers/Bertil mens de sexy buksene har rykket opp til Kakkonen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Sanny & Svensson
140. Någon klipper av kabeln

Sanny & Svensson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2023 48:41


Sanny har hittat Suomelas ersättare och Svensson berättar om en ersättare.

The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!
Ep. 1: Remote 3D Printing, Artificial Intelligence, Octoprint, and Klipper with Quinn Damerell of OctoEverywhere

The Infill Podcastâ„¢ - The Place For 3D Printing, Makers, and Creators!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2023 58:25


In this episode, we talk with Quinn Damerell of OctoEverywhere. Topics covered include secure remote 3D printing, Klipper, AI failure detection, and more. I hope you enjoy the conversation. Feel free to check out https://octoeverywhere.com for more info. 

Perfect First Layer Podcast
Raspberry Pi's, Getting rid of stringing, Nathan likes to break stuff and MUCH MORE!.

Perfect First Layer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 48:12


Questions: Hello! I have an Artillery Sidewinder X2 and would like to install Klipper on it to see if I can print faster. Since Klipper requires a Raspberry Pi, and it seems that they are too expensive, what are my options? There are so many different things to choose from and not sure which offers the best bang for the buck.  Steven    Hi Fellas, I am having a real problem with stringing. Whenever I print, I get these fine hairs all over the place. I did try changing the retraction settings in Cura, but it doesn't matter if I set it as high as 6 or as low as 1. I am printing mostly PLA on an Ender 5 Pro. Thanks for the great podcast! Justin

DLN Xtend
145: From the Ashes | Linux Out Loud 49

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2023 60:34


This week, Linux Out Loud chats about open source projects rising from the ashes. Welcome to episode 49 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:01:25 2K Webcam 00:06:20 State Prep 00:13:60 LXDE on TheC64 00:21:54 From the Ashes 00:40:19 Game of the Week 00:45:36 3D Printer Upgrades 00:56:20 SteamDeck Screen 00:59:39 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-49/ Our sponsor: - Linode - http://linode.com/tux - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

DLN Xtend
144: Rainbow Vomit Going Open Source

DLN Xtend

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 58:35


This week, Linux Out Loud chats about Cooler Master adding to open source. Welcome to episode 48 of Linux Out Loud. We fired up our mics, connected those headphones as we searched the community for themes to expound upon. We kept the banter friendly, the conversation somewhat on topic, and had fun doing it. 00:00:00 Introduction 00:03:03 Pi Power 00:06:27 Juno Interview 00:16:00 Robotics Team 00:26:29 Rainbow Vomit Going Open Source 00:38:58 Back to X11 00:44:10 Game of the Week 00:48:58 Klipper 00:57:19 Close Find the rest of the show notes at https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/linux-out-loud/lol-48/ Our sponsor: - Linode - http://linode.com/tux - Bitwarden - http://bitwarden.com/tux Contact info Matt (Twitter @MattTDN (https://twitter.com/MattTDN)) Wendy (Mastodon @WendyDLN (https://mastodon.online/@WendyDLN)) Nate (Website CubicleNate.com (https://cubiclenate.com/))

Perfect First Layer Podcast
Klipper, Bambu Lab, Prusa and MORE!!

Perfect First Layer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 62:00


The guys answer a question from Jim in St. Loius: "I keep hearing about how great Klipper is. Unfortunately it seems when I try to learn about it, I am met with a long and complicated installation. And the Klipper website is even worse. Can you recommend a site or actually explain the process of installation? And do I really need it? I have an Ender 3 V2 and would like to delve more into the hobby, but it just seems like everyone over complicates the process." Which of course leads to a side discussion of Bambu Lab printer, Marlin and Prusa

Tech@Lunch
Full Episode 51 -What is Klipper for 3D Printing?

Tech@Lunch

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 45:50


Hello And Welcome to the 51st Tech@Lunch Full Episode. The full-length episodes are around 30 minutes long and span the duration of a lunch break. This week's Lunch topic is a discussion about what is Klipper for 3d Printing and how do we use it and what are our thoughts of it. We investigate what the Firmware is and how we use it to control our printers and why we went to it. Klipper is a 3D Printing Firmware that gives the user more control over the printer.  So join us as we dive into What is Klipper for your 3D Printer. Join us on the Vulcanara Technology Solutions Youtube Channel for new videos. Stay tuned for the Details regarding the Giveaway we are going to do. Leave a comment on this video on YouTube saying vacuum if you want to see us test a 3D printer in a vacuum chamber.

Scales N Tales
Episode 46 Steven Klipper *epi 6 of Bass and Buzzed*

Scales N Tales

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 120:19


Steven Klipper AKA swimbait daddy of BC joins me and we cover everything that has led to his success over the last season. For being in Canada the guy is catching fish half of the dudes in the states would kill for. Unfortunately no dogfish talk in this BnB. Also, make sure you guys check out SNTpod.com and buy anything to enter the November Giveaway! Steven's socials; IG: steven_klipper Check out Leviathan Rods, and use code scales20 at check out for 20% off all your rod purchases! https://www.leviathanrods.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/adrian-dean/support

The Meltzone
Mom, we're famous!, Ultrasonic resin heating & watertight 3D prints

The Meltzone

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 77:25


Tom finished his VORON 2.4 build live streaming marathon and talks about his experience and the choices he made, for example using a DUET 3 with Reprap firmware instead of the usually used Klipper configuration. Stefan shows the latest Make magazine Germany in which this Podcast got featured. Both discuss the “Jugend Forscht” winning entry where ultrasonic modules are used to heat and disperse resin for better prints. Then there is a talk about the suspension of the Torshn Kickstarter and a still on-going crowd funding campaign on a 3D printed bike helmet. The questions cover topics on how to make 3D prints watertight, Siraya Tech resin availability in Europe and RRF on other boards besides Duet.