neofetch
Foreverwinter
You. I like you.
Honestly amazing setup. It's more robust than some industrial applications I've seen.
Thanks for such a great write-up. I'll definitely be referring back to it as I upgrade my homelab.
Cheers!
Ooh, I love how your prompt looks in your terminal. How did you make it look like that? (I didn't see anything in the alacritty yaml)
Edit: never mind, just saw that you already shared your Starship config. Thanks for sharing!
Canada Eh! 🍁
Mass Effect is one of my favourite game franchises of all time (the trilogy - I never really got into Andromeda) and can definitely be played on a casual basis.
What software is the dashboard in? I've seen similar ones here before but not sure what people are using to see it all at a glance like that.
Agreed! Just beware that the Amazon Basics ones used to be awesome (black or grey ones) but the new ones (green) are garbage. I have some of the older ones that are 8 years old and still going strong, where as the new ones wouldn't hold a charge after about a year of use.
I recently bought some Panasonic eneloop ones and although they are more expensive they seem to be much higher quality.
"I've been using vim for 15 years!... Because I can't figure out how to close it."
People have made the same recommendations here already but I'll throw my opinion in: the two I always recommend are the Ender (V2 or S1) and the Prusa (Mk4 or the Mini)
If you're unsure about how much you'll use it or if you're on a budget get the Ender.
But if you're confident this is something you'll use a lot and you can afford it get the Prusa.
The Prusa has just too many nice features to ignore, their support is amazing, and their upgrade path makes it something you can (likely) keep upgrading as new features come out.
For example I have a Mk3 and I have the upgrade kit to make it a Mk3s+. And now that the Mk4 is out there's upgrade kits to make it a 3.5, 3.9, or a 4. They're really great about trying to keep your printer as feature rich as possible without having to buy a whole new one.
That's awesome. But the part that your dad was an RF engineer but never took the time to teach you makes me sad. My dad is an elec tech and some of my fondest memories are of him teaching me electronics.
I guess the take away is if you have kids make sure to take the opportunity to teach them things you're passionate about! (As long as they show interest of course)
What do you do with the fountain pens? Write/journal? Or do you more enjoy inking them etc?