

as we delve into new capabilities at #NEHI we end up with some cool, weird equipment we (ab)use to our purposes that I really wish were more inspectable.
let me at the gcode console for the fiber laser. let me at the firmware. get your “make it easy to do these crafty things” software out of my way and let me run the machine. the extra layer on top for the folk who want or need that is great, and I commend you for releasing and maintaining it, but let me under the covers. I’ll sign a waiver. I am a known warranty voider and you sold me the things anyway. let’s just get this over with.
after swinging through #NEHI for a quick brush of the aluminum dust from the parts being lased, I decided the calibration effort on laser #2 wasn’t going to do the thing we want it to do, so I terminated the job and will do further troubleshooting this coming week.
in the meantime, laser #1 is still blasting away at the back half of the mold until tomorrow morning and streaming here: https://communitymedia.video/w/eLZ9aajWYauRVxGfjRxPJ4
once it’s done and I clean the machine, I’ll get it started doing the mold front while I try and fix laser #2.
lasers!

We’ve got the four-color FDM printer offline for maintenance (it’s failed to complete its last four prints, mostly due to filament jams during filament changes and losing z-axis accuracy in the process of resuming the print) but we’re printing another huge Keshi Filibus on the OrangeStorm Giga over here: https://communitymedia.video/w/aNHhQV2ThVFMC4ehpbiXuR
and my diagnostic stream for the lasers I tried to get focused this morning is here: https://communitymedia.video/w/aNHhQV2ThVFMC4ehpbiXuR
(for the record, the laser in the upper left appears to be well focused and is ablating the aluminum in ways I’d expect for a successful run; the laser in the lower right appears to need another round of calibration, but imma let it run in case I’m wrong and being overly judgemental)

The printers, they run again!
https://communitymedia.video/w/aNHhQV2ThVFMC4ehpbiXuR is printing another big Filibus, this time in gray PLA. ETA: two days
https://communitymedia.video/w/3CyKR5ZXDsjx8a7EheSoFp is printing another four-color Filibus, in hopes that the purge tower doesn’t get knocked off the bed this time and we get a successful completion. ETA: 28 hours

Y'all if things keep progressign the way they are currently progressing at #NEHI then next year is going to be So Busy.
We have so many *new* and *high quality* toys in the works, from some incredibly talented sculptors, we've solved a bunch of really tricky problems (and we have plenty more to solve, don't get me wrong, but we've solved a bunch already) and if we can just get over the next couple of hurdles...
If we can get over the last few hurdles, then by the middle of next year we should be producing dozens of original action figures, made from environmentally sustainable plastics, produced entirely in the southeastern US by people who are being paid a reasonable wage.
We should have secured at least a couple of independent media licensing deals, in addition to our existing original content and Public Domain work.
Really and truly I believe that what we're doing at NEHI and NETV are vital to the future.
When I talk about what we're doing in each of these endeavors, that might seem silly, but I believe it.
So I'm going to talk about what we do, and then I'm goign to talk about why I think it's important.
#NETV is a television network and streaming service based out of Ellijay Georgia. It's Community Media in the kind that I wrote about here: https://communitymedia.network
We have a roku channel and a peertube server and we produce a lot of local content including music gear review shows, sitcoms, and political video essays. We also archive a lot of historical material from film. I've written about this stuff extensively, and I'm not going to re-hash it all here.
#NEHI is our haha only serious name for our manufacturing efforts. We're running a machine shop and making injection molded plastic using environmentally sustainable and horizontally scalable processes.
Most of what we've done so far has been toys, most of what we'll do in the future is toys.
I believe these two things are vital for the same reason:
When we make a toy, that toy supplants something made by a distant corporation using media owned by Disney. When someone watches our news coverage or one of the public domain cartoons we've archived or whatever, that's half an hour they didn't spend watching something owned by Sinclair ( https://communitymedia.video/w/kJ3dojouKA3G5onEaKq1Vu )