Yeah the mic and speaker on the atom are OK if you are within 2 feet, beyond that they aren't any good. This looks good
Munkisquisher
I prefer a 20db cut that's flat across frequencys. Most audio engineer plugs like the etymotic range aim for that midpoint.
If I'm chainsawing, it's big muffling 30db cut earmuffs.
I've been using these for years for concerts, gym classes and always take spares to festivals to give to friends. They are designed for an even 20db cut when listening to music. They have the same fit as the cheaper ER20 but the xs have clearer top end.
I use them 3x a week and have a few pairs. They don't last forever as the baffles get softer over time. At $40 they last me a year which is pretty good value.
Yes I have tried with the tiny m5 voice hardware and it's seriously useful. But the mic and speaker are so compromised that it only works within a few feet. I want something like the first gen Google Home device, that works from across the room, and doesn't constantly get false positives
If he's caught the lessons of how will help the dozens of copycats
Isn't it insane how quick they are through the corners? Compare to the safety car that is a very fast production car, tuned for the track, which absolutely rips around the track, and is so much slower.
If you can, get to a race with f2, f3 and gt support races. It really highlights the differences in speed
Evaporative coolers save a ton of energy compared to refrigerator cycle closed loop systems. Like a swamp cooler, the hot liquid that comes from cooling the server is exposed to the atmosphere and enough evaporates off to cool the liquid by a decent percentage, then it's refrigerated before going back into the servers.
Data centre near me is using it and the fire service is used to be being called by people concerned the huge clouds of water vapor are smoke
Have you tried Vista?
Max should have had 2 of those penalties in that race. Just encourages him to keep running people off the track
I have my prusa connected to my WiFi, but it only serves up a Web page with limited control locally. You can only upload gcode, and start a print if the printer is ready to start. And it's open source so I'd expect the community to have found any issues.
You should monitor it's connections at the firewall and see if it's trying to make ANY connections outside your network, no reason for it to try making any dns queries even.