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Tip: a Reversed Featherboard Makes a Good Thin Ripping Jig

https://lemmy.world/post/11656474

Tip: a Reversed Featherboard Makes a Good Thin Ripping Jig - Lemmy.World

I found that simply reversing my featherboard makes it function very well as a thin ripping jig to make repeated (thin) cuts on the non-fence side of the blade. The featherboard’s hard side is simply set at the appropriate distance from the blade on the side opposite the fence. Then the fence is moved to support the larger “offcut” side as with a typical thin ripping jig, and you can make the cuts with push sticks as usual.

T2IAdapters for SDXL Released

https://lemmy.world/post/4737518

T2IAdapters for SDXL Released - Lemmy.world

Tiny, fast controlnets for SDXL via T2I-Adapters! > Sep. 8, 2023. We collaborate with the diffusers team to bring the support of T2I-Adapters for Stable Diffusion XL (SDXL) in diffusers! It achieves impressive results in both performance and efficiency. We release T2I-Adapter-SDXL models for sketch, canny, lineart, openpose, depth-zoe, and depth-mid.

2024 Chevy Blazer EV Base Model Dropped, Starting Price Jumps

https://lemmy.world/post/2974368

2024 Chevy Blazer EV Base Model Dropped, Starting Price Jumps - Lemmy.world

Another EV with the base model dropped almost immediately… > As if some Titan-born Marvel villain snapped his infinity-stone-laden fingers, the base option for the 2024 Chevy Blazer EV has vanished into thin air. The previously announced 1LT trim level, which was to start at $44,995, is gone, leaving the front-wheel-drive 2LT trim (pictured at top) in its place at an as yet unnamed price. […] > A Chevrolet spokesperson told Automotive News that the brand envisions higher trim levels on the upcoming Equinox EV will meet the needs of potential Blazer EV 1LT buyers, but with the Bolt twins on hiatus, we lament the removal of another budget-oriented option.

Is anyone running SD on AMD GPUs in Windows? The AMD benches seem to all be from Linux because of ROCm, presumably, but I’d be curious to know how much performance loss comes from using DirectML on, say, a 7900XT in Windows.
Note: to view full-res, use right-click --> open image in new tab.

SD Webui GPU Benchmark Data (Updated 2023-07-05)

https://lemmy.world/post/1066595

SD Webui GPU Benchmark Data (Updated 2023-07-05) - Lemmy.world

[https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/876368f7-5f02-4c15-acb1-e103fdb064c5.png] The graphic above summarizes the median 512x512 render speed (batch size 1) for various GPUs. Filtering is for single-GPU systems only, and for GPUs with more than 5 benchmarks only. Data is taken from this database [https://vladmandic.github.io/sd-extension-system-info/pages/benchmark.html] (thank you vladmandic!). Graph is color-coded by manufacturer: - NVIDIA consumer (lime green) - NVIDIA workstation (dark green) - AMD (red) - Intel (blue), seems there’s not enough data yet This is an update/prettier visualization from my previous post [https://lemmy.world/post/607247] using today’s data.

Toy Kitchen Knife for my Son [Oregon Maple, Scap Wood]

https://lemmy.world/post/643500

Toy Kitchen Knife for my Son [Oregon Maple, Scap Wood] - Lemmy.world

I made a small kitchen knife this weekend from scrap wood (an offcut of a coffee table I posted previously). It’s a toy knife made for my son, who likes to hang out it the kitchen with us and play with his toy food set. We got the set secondhand from our neighbors, but it sadly lacked a knife, so into the shop we go! Process: - Sketched a rough outline onto wood - Roughly cut it out with a jigsaw - Sanded it into shape with my belt sander (which is mounted upside-down into a purpose-built holder jig that clamps onto my bench) More images below. Cutting out the shape: [https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/a1947d0c-98bb-4025-a9a8-e13241c63072.png] Shaping on the belt-sander jig: [https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/38ab1b1d-ecd1-4373-beb5-2a9d07918699.png]

Summarized SD WebUI Bechmark Data (2023-06-25)

https://lemmy.world/post/607247