The everyday life of a 3D printer owner: a spool of filament was delivered, but it (inner diameter) doesn’t fit the filament feed system of the printer.
How it's started vs how it's going
New Device
Today a new toy appeared in my junk arsenal.
Fuck you, Instagram
Instagram locked my Jercoin account. I hadn’t even posted anything there — created it at the request of “clients”, going out of my way to accommodate them.
The Beauty of the Imperial System
in its volume part — it will make perfect sense to programmers.
thanks for staying tuned )
the redesign is complete, now filling it with content.
The answer to “what to write articles in” has been found: Markdown it is, GitHub Pages it is.
Collected a few articles: /en/docs/articles/
Also started another blog: /en/posts/2023/hugo-blog/
Selfie Stick
Suddenly realized that selfie sticks have vanished somewhere as a phenomenon. Moreover, these days a selfie stick is more of a cringe and a faux pas.
On Hugo, Once Again
A short note — a blog in Markdown powered by Hugo is simply a breath of fresh air after the sluggish browser-based Blogger. It renders instantly on the local machine, opens lightning-fast — including the already-published version — what a pleasure! (On top of that, it warms the soul to know the blog sits right here on my laptop and is not the property of Google.) The urge to write has come alive again.
User Manual
Write a manual for operating yourself#
I came across an interesting technique called a personal user manual: the idea is to write, either from a simple template or in free form, an operating manual for the object known as “Me.”
Yet Another Blog - Hugo
Preamble#
For some reason, I felt like rebuilding my website by the end of 2023 — if before it just hosted the content of my blog (one of them), I wanted to turn it into a “typical” placeholder: a small static page (or a set of pages) with a collection of useful links to blogs, articles, maybe a GitHub or LinkedIn profile, and so on. What’s the best way to host something like that? GitHub Pages, of course — you write some markdown, push it to a repository, GitHub does its magic — and voilà, the site is ready. Minimum effort, maximum result, especially since https://disfinder.github.io had already existed for some time, hosting various notes I made for myself.
