kaedon
@kaedon@beehaw.org
- Comment on Cloudflare CEO says bot internet traffic has overtaken humans 2 weeks ago:
Another community that has sprung up recently is Reticulum. Some of the relay chats rooms, websites and forums on there feel like the early internet and the emphasis on direct communication over radios could prevent bots. But it’s definitely not ready as an internet replacement. Maybe in a few years…
- Comment on Wireless mouse with silent switches recommendation 1 year ago:
It depends on how worn they are. You could probably reused the gliders if you are careful when removing them. I did end up replacing mine though. Here’s some replacements: www.aliexpress.us/item/3256805149791432.html
Wow that swelling problem is mysterious!
If 3d printing doesn’t work out: www.aliexpress.us/item/3256807056619542.html?
- Comment on Wireless mouse with silent switches recommendation 1 year ago:
I can highly recommend this! The switches are very cheap and I love my silent G305. The hardest part was probably the middle click button but you can skip that one if you don’t care about it as much. While you’re inside, you could clean the scroll wheel which might fix your swelling problem.
Here’s the switches: www.aliexpress.us/item/3256803887113310.html And the video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKPUPIjv1kI
I am not very skilled with solder and found it very easy. You don’t need anything fancy like a desoldering gun. Just a regular soldering iron with some solder and flux worked for me.
- Comment on Get scattered 1 year ago:
Oops you’re right missed a few zeros.
- Comment on Get scattered 1 year ago:
There is a very small of red shift. If you were standing on the equator watching a sunset, then your radial velocity relative to the sun is only ~461m/s. So the green light from the sun 550nm would be red shifted by +0.08nm. That little red shift wouldn’t be noticeable. However, as the sun sets there’s a lot more atmosphere in the way, which scatters blue light more than red light. (Why the sky is blue)
- Comment on voltage rule 2 years ago:
Ah yes, the Scanning Tunneling Microscope.