If prints are failing at a certain height, you might have a z axis issue. You can try cleaning, lubricating, and calibrating the z.
If prints are failing at a certain height, you might have a z axis issue. You can try cleaning, lubricating, and calibrating the z.
My apologies, I took time to try explaining something better to people than the man pages and ending up better appreciating them.
I have written long-ass reports to try explaining shit, only to find myself understanding the manual. I think it’s part of learning.
I suppose Orwell is supposed to be the average user?
Criticisms of systemd say it does too much, so maybe every basic animal on the farm is systemd? Orwell is complaining about how the pig is overly complicated for a farm animal.
If I really break it down, I guess the author is saying that while it could be cool to have talking pigs, they have no place in a production farm. The average Linux admin doesn’t want tools that can do everything, they just need the thing done??
IDK, feels overly heavy for the delivery.
I have heard it repeated several times. It’s based on how virtual assistants are allowed to listen over your mic for keywords, applications like Facebook requesting full microphone access, and people with stories of getting ads for things after having a conversation about the same.
The third could be a form of recency bias; I just learned about this, and now I see it everywhere. Also, it’s easy to know who is in your circle, and items you recently searched could be advertised to your friends. I saw this by getting sudden ads for handguns after getting an Amazon link from my gun crazy friend.
/mnt/ is where I would put this. Only exception would be if I had a service I was providing, like a media player server, and then I might mount it at /srv/