●● IRC: #techbytes @ Techrights IRC Network: Tuesday, June 18, 2024 ●● ● Jun 18 [02:15] *parsifal has quit (Quit: Leaving) [02:49] *x-amarsh04 has quit (Quit: Konversation terminated!) [02:56] *x-amarsh04 (~amarsh04@qezxp5nudz5uq.irc) has joined #techbytes ● Jun 18 [05:04] schestowitz[TR2] "> That's excellent news! [05:04] schestowitz[TR2] Yes, indeed! [05:04] schestowitz[TR2] Thanks for passing it on, [05:04] schestowitz[TR2] " [05:05] schestowitz[TR2] > LLM = Largely Lifted Mediocrity [05:05] schestowitz[TR2] It does not strike me as particularly funny. [05:05] schestowitz[TR2] -- [05:05] schestowitz[TR2] Dr Richard Stallman ● Jun 18 [09:15] *psydruid (~psydruid@jevhxkzmtrbww.irc) has left #techbytes [09:30] *psydruid (~psydruid@jevhxkzmtrbww.irc) has joined #techbytes [09:40] *IsambardPrince has quit (connection closed) ● Jun 18 [10:10] schestowitz[TR2]
[10:10] schestowitz[TR2][10:10] schestowitz[TR2]The limiting factor was mostly about how long it took to change the material, so Mayer got to work designing a carousel-like device that could house up to four sheets of stock and rotate each one into place after the previous one had finished. A stepper motor driven by a Trinamic TMC2100 was responsible for moving the drum while an Arduino UNO Rev3 received inputs from external switches an [10:10] schestowitz[TR2] d then sent pulses to the motor driver accordingly.
[10:10] schestowitz[TR2]
[10:18] schestowitz[TR2][10:18] schestowitz[TR2]Plasma 6.1 is due to be released in three days, and lots of attention went into final release readiness activities: QA, bug-fixing, performance profiling, auto-testing, stuff like that. Boring but important! And happily, reviews of the 6.1 beta are, like, really good. So we want to make sure that the final release doesnt disappoint!
[10:18] schestowitz[TR2]In addition, were hard at work on Plasma 6.2, which is now beginning to accumulate features. Major areas of focus are some of the remaining Wayland pain points, including tablet and artist workflows. You can see some progress on that already: [...]
[10:18] schestowitz[TR2]
The MUSE Book is a laptop that features a RISC-V-based architecture, presumably powered by the SpacemiT K1, an 8-core AI CPU built on the RISC-V X60 architecture. The MUSE Book is available for pre-order in three con [10:27] schestowitz[TR2] figurations, which include up to 16GB of RAM and two SSD storage capacities.