Cura was also the first one i used, but it was a creality branded shitshow of a program. So i found orca slightly after that and now use it ever since. I love the inbuilt filament calibration tools and especially, that i can control my printer directly from the slicer, to e. G. stop a job i sent too hastily or something.
Deckname
Yes, i tried the flatpak too, but it doesn't do well with hardware accerlation and nvidia gpu. Also i think there was an issue with localization to german.
IMHO the best slicer is orcaslicer, which works fine on Ubuntu as an appimage. On other distros i used distrobox to create an ubuntu box and then start the appimage.
If only that were true...
Yeah then i would suggest something like debian or ubuntu server. Or look into a deciated NAS OS like proxmox, truenas, openmediavault or hexos.
That's what i want to go with too!
That's what I'm wondering too ;) probably low supply? Or the fact that they go straight to e waste and only end users sell and try to get as much money as possible.
Interesting, thanks!
What do you mean? For many processors you can circumvent the tpm requirement. For other cases, you can use Linux mint (for web browsing, etc.) if you need some windows software you're SOL probably, although with winboat its relatively easy, to run windows apps semi-integrated!
I guess I'll have to try it sometime again :)
No i meant like uploading files somewhere or attaching stuff to Mails, when i have the folder already open.
Couldn't yet find a really satisfying solution to that
I have good experiences with torbox, they have a webdav server you can use to transfer your downloaded files to your PC. Their most premium tier also gives you access to usenet, if that's of any interest for you.