I recently invested in an 128oz mini-keg that fits in my fridge door. This lets me serve my homebrewed beer more conveniently than filling individual bottles. The downside is you can't tell at a glance how many more servings are in the keg.
The solution? I weighed the keg empty (~ 4 pounds) and now I can weigh the keg, subtract 4, and since a pint's a pound the world around, the number of pounds is approximately the number of pints left (in this case 5 pints).
I'm halfway through the second doubleweave overshot towel, and so far things are going smoothly and mistake-free! I probably won't do another update on this project until they are off the loom and hemmed, unless a fun disaster strikes.
Just flashed my phone with an OS image that was created on the same phone a few minutes earlier 😜 It works! #librem5
More progress on my @hackaday -inspired knitting machine clock (code name Tempus Nectit)!
The bottom case printed successfully and I have mounted all of the major components: the Sentro 22-hook knitting machine, the stepper motor, power and the Raspberry Pi + Motor Hat.
I also wired two push buttons to what will be the bottom of the case that let you manually advance the knitting machine in each direction.
Next I design the front cover.
My son completed his first weaving project (he's 10). This white and red striped wool scarf was woven on a rigid heddle loom.
A short introduction on how to use your desktop system for #MobileLinux development using a nested #phosh session (and without having to compile anything):
https://phosh.mobi/posts/phosh-dev-part-0/
This is planned to have follow up parts, let's see how this works out.
One towel down, two to go! From this angle you can see both sides and the reversible nature of this doubleweave pattern.
The second attempt is looking good for this 3D printed case for my knitting clock. Along with fixing some mistakes in my design, I also modified it so that it could print for the most part without supports. There was one area where that was unavoidable, so I added in basic supports. While there is a little cleanup where it bridged there, it's much less than I saw when I enabled internal supports in the first print.
Technical author, FOSS advocate, public speaker, Linux security & infrastructure geek, author of The Best of Hack and /: Linux Admin Crash Course, Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks and many other books, ex-Linux Journal columnist.