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One time software engineer, one time telecommunications engineer, one time labeling systems guru, one time brand and innovation manager for some globally known brands. Currently building a bleeding edge marketing operations consultancy with some very talented people.
Grew up in Hawaii, raising kids in Atlanta.
Enjoy tech, building things, being outdoors, photography, good food, and science.
CityAtlanta
Pronounshe/him
Only the duck portraits had duck lips
@HollyCo26588808
@clarissadelune some might say that many recent vertebrates also have four eyes 👓 🤓 👓

Great thought here on printing a water shut off key to prepare for icy weather.

https://kolektiva.social/@hydroponictrash/115936450067161800

You also might want a window scraper to replace that one you know you bought but haven’t seen for the last three years. Lots of models out there. This one printed well for me.

https://makerworld.com/en/models/72900-ultimate-ice-scraper

#snowmageddon #hothlanta #3dprinting

For those in the south preparing for this winter storm, it might be a good idea to get a water shut-off key if you lose power and your pipes freeze. You can buy these in stores, but if you have a 3D printer, here is a file!

https://makerworld.com/en/models/2280080-water-meter-key#profileId-2486286

I'm printing five at a time and giving them away in my free store/tiny library to anyone that needs one. If you have a 3D printer and some extra filament, I highly recommend printing off some for your neighbors, you might save someone's day!

#snowmageddon #winterstorm #texaswinter

@ihnatko agree with all of this, also I’ve found that recipes that are a B in a slow cooker can become an A with an instant pot. The fast pressure cooking is better at keeping ingredient flavors separate and sharp rather than blending and dulling them, while still getting everything tender and cooked through. Something like stew or curry can really benefit.
@bosquebill @jerzone while wearing earplugs
@jerzone good idea. I might print a couple of those. Did you come up with anything that works well?

@jmw Diamondback nozzles are awesome! Unfortunately I don't think that I can justify paying almost as much for a nozzle as I did for my printer, especially not when 30 brass nozzles are under $10.

@jmw @mutthew Old nozzle went through a few sessions with a brass brush while hot, which worked reasonably well but took far more than 30 cents of my time. Now that I've swapped it out I might experiment with soaking it in a solvent like ethyl acetate. Any experience cleaning nozzles with solvents?

Maybe a little overdue for a new nozzle. #3dprinting