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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 7th, 2023

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  • nice! I see we both landed on very similar solutions to this. I’m going to implement your double-reversi loop to see how that plays out - it’s the main difference to mine which keeps the secondary piston extended by default, and it retracts and pushes based on the pulse-extender decaying fully.

    I like this, thanks for sharing!


  • OK, so here’s the update. thanks to all the suggestions - I combined a few ideas, and came up with the following solution.

    The observer triggers as items drop, this does two things at once:

    1. Drives a pulse extender which immediately retracts the secondary piston
    2. Pulses the primary piston after a short delay to push the items into the space that the secondary piston just made

    As the clock decays fully the secondary piston fires and pushes the items.

    An added bonus here is spam protection - so if items drop consecutively more quickly than the clock decays, it simply resets the clock so you don’t get pistons firing together, or too quickly. This way nothing ever ends up on the top of the slime/honey blocks. I’ve added a front-side view for those curious as well.

    Thanks for all the help and tips!



  • I tried to implement this, however my right hand side piston stays extended for the duration of the pulse extender rather than firing and retracting like the left hand side one does. Not sure if I am missing something in the pic that I cannot see. I also wasn’t able to figure out what you’re doing with the dropper - seems like it’s on top of the observer for some reason and the clock coming out of it doesn’t do anything?












  • Swaziboy@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlQuestion about ZenBook 14 audio
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    8 months ago

    I have a newer Zenbook and can confirm when I first got it, and wiped windows to put Ubuntu on it, audio didn’t work from the speakers. Headphones worked just fine. There’s a blog from some Asus dev community documenting the issues and resolution. I’m on mobile right now and can’t find it. I can confirm it was addressed on Fedora a few kernel releases back though and that all is well. I’ll post the blog link shortly. Per post above please provide your model number.

    Edit: typos







  • Thanks for the input. To simplify we’re going with straight edges (I think it’ll look classier too) and I am going to put some dowels in for a bit of additional joinery strength. See pics attached for some drawings. Also I think technically this is just an angled bridle joint, not a half-lap bridle joint.

    Now I have a further Q. And that is “how does one cut the inside of the outer(!!) bridle, on an angle to accurately match the taper?” (see the triangle with text labels on the drawing). The offset from horizontal is about 2.5 degrees due to the tapered nature of the horizontal legs.