• 36 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 11th, 2023

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  • Honestly when it works it works wonderfully. Most of my problems with my ender 3 come down to me being a dumbass and not taking care of it properly, and/or just the nozzles they ship with it being cheap as fuck and impossible to cold pull.

    No joke my first ever successful cold pull was 2 days ago, because I had finally gotten a decent set of nozzles.

    If you want to get really serious about printing there are better options out there, but for the cost they really are awesome beginner printers (to be fair I haven’t kept up much with printers, so I don’t know many other good cheap ones). I mostly only dabble with printing, but my ender 3 pro that I got like 3 years ago has served me very well.













  • DumbAceDragon@sh.itjust.worksto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneRule
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    11 days ago

    I’m talking more so about HDDs, which were still very prevalent back then. SDDs wouldn’t hit similar size to price for a few more years.

    I had a mid-range laptop back then that was at least 500+ gigs with a HDD. And when I got my desktop, which was a hand-me-down 2012 dell inspiron from my grandmother, it had a 2TB HDD.

    These days SSDs are fast and cheap, so the 1TB standard not really changing a ton has more to do with the switch from HDDs to SSDs.

    I could be misremembering a few things here, so feel free to correct me.



  • DumbAceDragon@sh.itjust.worksto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneRule
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    12 days ago

    On the one hand I think it’s kinda just the natural progression of things. The reason we haven’t been feeling the need for huge storage is because hard drives underwent a huge boom that rapidly outpaced our memory needs. Like even 10 years ago, 1TB was pretty much the standard, and kinda still is. We also used to have optical disks that most of the game data would just live on.

    On the other hand, there is no reason for a remake of a PS2 game to take up 70 gigs.