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Cake day: June 16th, 2025

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  • If it’s not clogged (change your print nozzle if yours is easily swappable), make sure the heat is right on the hotend. Extruder skipping can happen if the material isn’t melting fast enough to have the right viscosity and hence the extruder just can’t squeeze it out fast enough. As a corollary, try slowing down your print and raising the temp a bit.





  • Yes, if you change the battery chemistry, or power draw of the system, you can still get good battery life out of devices. Thats not the point here.

    The point here is comparing two devices that are identical minus the fact that one has a user replaceable battery and one does not. The switch 2 is the same in both regions minus that. They’re not going to switch battery types for one region like that as chargers and other components and testing and many other things would also change… they would be more likely to change the wattage of the battery or reduce performance of the cpu to make up for the difference in size.



  • Yeap, this has always been the trade off for replaceable anything.

    If some part is “easily replaceable” it must have a connector thats up for the task, as well as independent structural integrity to support the thing being replaced (the battery) and to properly define the area it fits.

    This is one major technical reason why manufacturers got rid of replaceable batteries in the first place. People complained device batteries didn’t last long enough, as well as expressing a desire for smaller devices. Comparing those requests, manufacturers just went with “well, if people are going to replace the device after 2yrs anyway, we can just ditch all that extra support for replaceable batteries and cram a bigger one in while also making the device smaller.”

    And yes, people replace their stuff way more often than they should… i still know people that replace their phone every one to two years, which I don’t understand … I’m on my 6yo one now and it’s still perfectly fine.








  • I’d argue that they can still learn typing, researching, google docs (which, lets be honest, are close enough to microsoft, open or libre office to count), navigating the web, learning how to detect scams, AI and things like that… even on a Chromebook.

    That said, my kid is about to go to college and hasn’t used a chromebook since 6th grade. I don’t currently know anyone whose kid has either. They’re just not used for schools much anymore. Their huge selling point was simplifying the OS support and battery life, but her current Lenovo lasts all day already as do most normal laptops at this point and GPO’s and AD are a things.



  • Not sure if joking/trolling, but school computers don’t generally ALLOW social media or chat apps like Discord and such, as well as harshly limit internet usage with guardrails. They’re pretty locked down and even when at home monitor network usage.

    I don’t like laptops and such in schools, but kids ARE going to need to know how to use them to be successful and that’s something a lot of parents can’t teach.

    When I was growing up, we had to learn how to type, how to use the Dewey Decimal System and library terminals to look up where books were for research and such. Later, we had Computer Labs to do this work and write reports and such… This is no different. Don’t confuse a smartphone internet experience and its constant advertising and social aspects with what kids get on these laptops.