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I finally decided to break out of Bambu’s increasingly-closed walled garden.

I’ve had the Bambu X1C for a couple of years already, and it is a really, really great 3D printer. There’s no question whatsoever that Bambu has transformed the 3D printing space for consumers, and has done so while also creating some very high-quality premium hardware.

I’ve been meaning to write about the various mods I’ve made over time, but at this point it’s a bit far down the line to go into each one in detail 😁

  • riser with LED strip, remote controlled via a Raspberry Pi Pico with a simple MicroPython HTTP-to-RF API that can dim the strip
  • IKEA SKADIS mounted on the side with tools
  • boxes to hold desiccant beads in the AMS, and a hygrometer
  • after-market high flow nozzle (obviously)
  • Garolite plate
  • third party nozzle wiper
  • etc etc

The printer has been very reliable, and straightforward to maintain as well.

So why hack it? Well… I own it, I think it can be made better, and… because.

When the X1Plus Expander launched on Crowd Supply I went ahead and backed the project, as I was interested in ways I could potentially add extra sensors and a better camera; as well as finally being able to connect over a LAN socket rather than having to be on wifi (the studio network can be a bit flaky from time to time).

The X1Plus Expander depends on third-party firmware (X1Plus), which requires the printer itself to be jailbroken / rooted.

Long story short, I’ve finally done that.

I was extremely impressed with how smooth and clear the project contributors have made the process. I went through the official process with Bambu to switch my printer into the unsupported third party program, downgraded to a rootable version of the firmware, rooted it, then ran through the remote install process (via wifi from my Framework) to install the firmware. I’d already printed the case for the X1Plus Expander. Then it was simply a case of following the exciting and dramatic installation video.

I now have VNC access to drive the controls on the printer’s touchscreen remotely; SSH access; the ability to network mount storage; etc etc. Lots of options to explore here. I was even able to upgrade the firmware of components like the AMS from within the third party X1Plus firmware.

You’ll also spot the OpenSpool sitting off to the side in the image above. That’s another third-party addon that I’ve barely started to use, but it extends the ability for the printer to recognise RFID-tagged spools from Bambu themselves, to having it recognise “any” spool that I happen to tag and configure.

All of this is background tinkering and admin… apart from the case for the X1Plus Expander, I’ve not been using the printer itself quite so much lately, due to travels.

Open source (and open source hardware!) FTW!

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andypiper.co.uk/2025/07/01/ope…

#100DaysToOffload #3dPrinting #Bambu #crowdSupply #electronics #hardware #Linux #openSource #openSourceHardware #openspool #Technology









Hoodoos trail Yoho National Park, BC


Moderate 3.8 mi out and back
1,332 ft elevation gain
Hiked 6/3/25

Beginning at the former Yoho NP campground, this short but steep trail takes you to one of the many great hoodoos found along the Canadian Rockies. As the trail crosses multiple washout areas, the trail degrades in places but remains manageable. A split towards the end takes you to different views which are both pretty cool, but both washed out a lot/steep.

The view up at the hoodoos from the lower trail terminus. Trees grow in the more stable sections of the hill.

An upstream view of Hoodoo creek taken from the walking bridge. Mountains may be seen in the distance.

This section of the lower hoodoos trail was very degraded, with atleast one foothold wedged into the slide.








in reply to chobeat

Can the clickbates stop using "meltdown?" Do we really think these fucking snakes even more then snicker at this investigative reporting? what are these papers threshold for claiming a meltdown?

I like how I can't even read this article with an ad blocker enabled.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)

in reply to Blaze (he/him)

Barcelona - 9/2

Newell's Old Boys - 7/1

Any Saudi team - 15/2

Bayern Munich - 17/2

PSG - 11/1

Man City - 16/1

Chelsea - 20/1

Arsenal - 22/1

People really think there’s a 1 in 12 chance Messi moves back to PSG?

(Apart from that, him moving back to barca is about the dumbest financial decision the club could make, but given the way they are dealing with finances in the present… wouldn’t be massively suprising if they favoured such a move)

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


GAZA: Starvation or Gunfire – This is Not a Humanitarian Response




Zohran Mamdani on Affordability, Billionaires, and Fighting Hate | Morning Edition | NPR


I'd not yet seen Mamdani in a sit-down interview. He gives off strong Obama vibes.




Sorella di perfezione - Giuseppe Iannozzi - LFA Publisher - La poesia salverà il mondo!


Sorella di perfezione - Giuseppe Iannozzi - LFA Publisher - La poesia salverà il mondo!"

facebook.com/share/v/1AZp1kivP…



What Does a Post-Google Internet Look Like


Welcome to the future, where asking a question costs $4.99 and you'll never be able to find out if the answer is right or not.



“Inside Tokyo’s STRANGEST Retro Apartment” — “Nell’Appartamento Retrò PIÙ STRANO di Tokyo”


Questo complesso condominiale di Tokyo (e di che città, sennò) è così assolutamente pazzurdo… nemmeno in uno dei miei sogni iperconfusi avrei mai potuto vedere una cosa del genere. E pensare che, a quanto si vede da vari elementi sparsi nell’appartamento, è pure tipo del secolo scorso, è vecchio! Ma ha fin troppe cose particolari… […]

octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…


“Inside Tokyo’s STRANGEST Retro Apartment” — “Nell’Appartamento Retrò PIÙ STRANO di Tokyo”


youtube.com/watch?v=VEuZCaUMcG…

Questo complesso condominiale di Tokyo (e di che città, sennò) è così assolutamente pazzurdo… nemmeno in uno dei miei sogni iperconfusi avrei mai potuto vedere una cosa del genere. E pensare che, a quanto si vede da vari elementi sparsi nell’appartamento, è pure tipo del secolo scorso, è vecchio! Ma ha fin troppe cose particolari… queste sono solo le più belle per me:

  • L’ambiente di ingresso del condominio è indescrivibile, con questa forma circolare di nudo cemento, e due diverse scale che ci girano attorno… ricorda fin troppo uno degli ambienti iniziali di Mirror’s Edge, anche se a confronto questo è più stretto.
  • Le due scale del condominio (non guardate sotto…) dividono gli appartamenti in standard, che comunque non sono male, e costosi, che sono fin troppo lussuriosi anche per gli standard occidentali… questi ultimi sembrano cosa sarebbe una fottuta camera di hotel se fosse sviluppata come una casa intera.
  • È altissimo relativamente ad altri edifici (sempre abitativi) nelle vicinanze, quindi da alcune finestre si vede un panorama di tutto il distretto di Ikebukuro e anche ben oltre…
  • Per l’appartamento di lusso, c’è pure una doccia sul tetto! Cosa??? (Fa paura, un po’…)
  • I piani bassi, invece, includono una scaletta di metallo di emergenza, che si piazza e si ripone; top per uscire di casa senza incontrare i vicini, o quando si rischia di essere in ritardo.

L’unica cosa che non capisco è, appunto… perché mai è vecchio? Non si fanno più queste cose assurde? Molto triste, ed ennesimo indicatore di recessione eppure, secondo me, bisognerebbe costruirla in Italia sta roba… così (possibilmente, auspicabilmente…) per legge di mercato gli appartamenti normali noiosi nelle vicinanze scenderanno di prezzo, e le persone normali si potranno permettere almeno quelli. (Anche se, visto che in questo appartamento di lusso ha un valore di 90 milioni di yen, circa 531mila euro, credo sia già più economico di un appartamento seppur scrauso ma in città come Milano, Torino, Bologna… ops.)

#apartment #appartamento #condominio #lusso #Tokyo






Chi ha inventato la roulette russa? da Focus.it


Non ci sono prove che questa prassi fosse realmente in uso negli ambienti militari. L'idea della roulette russa è stata ripresa nel 1937 nell'omonimo romanzo dello scrittore svizzero Georges Surdez, ed è soprattutto questa versione ad avere definito l'idea moderna del gioco mortale.




How Monopolies Secretly Steal Your Freedom (ft. Lina Khan)




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Mark Zuckerberg Already Knows Your Life. Now He Wants His AI to Run It


Forget chatbots. Zuckerberg’s vision is much grander. He is betting that within a few years, AI will not just be answering your questions or writing your emails. It will be managing your schedule, anticipating your needs, running your home, helping you make decisions, and maybe even guiding your career. Call it Life-as-a-Service, powered by Meta.

The move is seen as a direct challenge to competitors. “The launch of Meta Superintelligence labs isn’t just an announcement; it’s a statement: Meta won’t settle for second place in AI,” commented Alon Yamin, cofounder and CEO of the AI detection platform Copyleaks. He added, “Meta and Mark clearly see this as a make or break moment for AI leadership.”



Ron DeSantis plans to 'deputize' Floridians as 'judges' of immigrant detainees


"One of the things I think that is exciting about this is, we're offering up our National Guard and other folks in Florida to be deputized to be immigration judges. We're working with the Department of Justice for the approvals. I'm sure Pam [Bondi] will approve," DeSantis said as Trump nodded his head and said, "Yep."

DeSantis didn't elaborate on who the other "folks" would be.

DeSantis continued, "But then...I'll have a National Guard judge advocate here. Someone has a notice to appear, Biden would tell them to come back in three years and appear. Now, you'll be able to appear in like a day or two. So, they're not going to be detained, hopefully, for all that long."



An unexpected green roof benefit: purging urban rainfall of practically all microplastics


Really, all this says is "microplastics that fall on soil stay in the soil", but, you know, could be worse?
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China Moved an Entire Historical Building Complex Using Walking Robots - Core77





UN Expert Exposes Dozens of Companies Complicit in Israel’s Genocide, Apartheid in Palestine


Amazon, Blackrock, and Keller Williams LLC are some of the companies named in the report.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/truthout.org…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.




The Things I Have NOT Done Today


It's the end of the day, the first in this new week following the summer solstice. As much as it pains me, the Intergalactic Council demands to...

stuff.octt.eu.org/2025/07/the-…



No, in Spagna non ci sono 54 gradi… almeno non nell’aria!


In questi giorni molti media parlano di 54 °C a Siviglia, ma attenzione: si tratta della temperatura della superficie terrestre, rilevata dal satellite Sentinel-3 dell’ESA, non della temperatura dell’aria che sentiamo o leggiamo nei bollettini meteo.

Questi dati si ottengono misurando il calore emesso dal suolo, che può essere ben più elevato rispetto all’aria, specie su asfalto o terreno secco esposto al sole.

Le temperature dell’aria in Spagna, seppur molto alte, non hanno superato i 45 °C.

Un dato importante da comprendere per evitare confusione e allarmismi.
Scopri di più sul nostro sito.



Cina batte record rinnovabili: più fotovoltaico in un mese che tutta l'Europa in un anno


Come indica il rapporto annuale World Energy Investment dell’Agenzia internazionale dell’energia, la Cina è oggi il più grande investitore energetico al mondo, spendendo il doppio dell’Unione Europea e quasi quanto l’Ue e gli Stati Uniti messi insieme. Nell’ultimo decennio, la quota della Cina nella spesa globale per l’energia pulita è passata da un quarto a quasi un terzo



How I Chained Directory Traversal and CSV Parser Abuse for RCE in a Django App


Interesting exploit and a nice writeup of the process.


Most Common PIN Codes


Leaked 4 digit PINs graphed


[Duplicate] Bug in New Voyager Update: Comment Sort Shenanigans


Edit: Just realised this is a duplicate of lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/2823790…

If your default comment sort isn’t “hot”, the when you look at the comments on a post it will be sorted by “hot”, your comment sort will only be applied to a post once you refresh that post.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


Stop Killing Games: La battaglia per salvare i videogiochi che hai già acquistato


eci.ec.europa.eu/045/public/#/…
#News


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‘AI is no longer optional’ — Microsoft admits AI doesn’t help at work


in reply to sturger

LLMs have their flaws, but to claim they are wrong 70% of the time is just hate train bullshit.

Sounds like you base this info on models like GPT3. Have you tried any newer model?


in reply to Lvxferre [he/him]

As it happens, "Ptolemaois" is how the name is written in at least German, Swedish and Finnish, so speakers of those languages (Swedish and Finnish myself) likely pronounce it most correctly?

Never really understood why English insists of weirdly dropping the final bits of Greek and Latin names ("Plutarch" vs "Plutarkhos", "Justinian" vs "Justinianus" etc)

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to Tor Lillqvist

If by "most correctly", you mean "the closest to what Koine Greek would do", then yes. Note however that each language will impose restrictions on the allowed sounds and sequences of; for example Finnish won't use [ä] like Ancient Greek would, simply because the sound isn't there in Finnish (it adapts it to an [ɑ]).

Also note the word itself can be pronounced multiple ways even in Koine Greek. For example the ⟨αῖ⟩ diphthong can be read as either [äɪ̯] (as in English "by") or as [ɛ:] (as in English air); as far as I'm aware this sound change happened in early Koine Greek times.

Never really understood why English insists of weirdly dropping the final bits of Greek and Latin names (“Plutarch” vs “Plutarkhos”, “Justinian” vs “Justinianus” etc)


Short explanation: English does it because it's what French does. And French does it because of its history as a Latin descendant.

Long explanation:

Since French is a Romance language, it's the result of a Latin dialect undergoing a bunch of sound changes. Those sound changes affected all words inherited from Latin. For example capus/capum¹ → chef, bonus/bonum → bon, Romanus/Romanum → Romain (yup, it applies to personal names!) ille → le, so goes on.

However, Latin is a prestige language in Europe. So even if French is a Latin descendant, it kept reborrowing words from Latin. And because of the above, French started changing those loanwords in a specific way, that kind of mimics part of its own evolution.

In other words: French developed a convention on how to handle Latin borrowings². And part of that convention is to sub/remove the endings. Other Romance languages do something similar³.

What I said applies to the Latin names. Now, the Greek names go one step deeper: Latin itself borrowed Greek words left and right, adapting them into Latin. Some would be eventually inherited by French. So the convention on how to handle Latin names in French also handles Greek names: "Latinise them first, then pretend they're Latin words."

Then you get English. Most of that Classical knowledge entered English through French, so English borrowed that convention of adapting Latin words too. Eventually developing its own convention on how to do it, that looks kind of similar to the one French used back then. And some names were subjected to local sound changes, and just like the Romance languages English messes a fair bit with word endings. And the vowels, too (Great Vowel Shift).

In contrast, German also treats Latin as a prestige language. But since it's neither a Romance language nor borrowing the convention from one, it's getting the names straight from Latin, and modifying them a bit less⁴. That includes keeping the nominative endings of the words.

NOTES:

  1. I'm listing words by their Latin nominative and accusative. The nominative is the form likely to be borrowed; however, French and the other Romance languages inherited the accusative.
  2. This can be seen by the Modern French renditions of those names: Ptolémée, Justinien, Plutarque.
  3. For reference, look at the Italian versions of those names: Tolomeo, Giustiniano, Plutarco. Parts of the ending are still there, unlike in French, but the ending -s/-m is gone.
  4. It still does change them, mind you. After a word is borrowed into a language, it's subjected to the sound changes of that language; plus spelling plays a huge role, and even in non-Romance languages there are minor conventions on how you're "supposed" to handle Latin names. Cue to German spelling "Justinianus" instead of "IVSTINIANVS" or "Iustinianus".

Sorry for the wall of text.



A “Striking” Trend: After Texas Banned Abortion, More Women Nearly Bled to Death During Miscarriage


A new ProPublica data analysis adds to the mounting evidence that abortion bans have made the common experience of first-trimester miscarriage far more dangerous.



On the Capacity, Performance, and Reliability of microSD Cards