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A simple direction on editing Print Specs. Blender Online

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How to add a signature on your Print Specs. Blender

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How old is your current laptop?

Asus M409DAI brought it on 12 June 2020. In such time, laptop of my choice and budget was hard to find but thanks to Amazon I got it in 32900 rupees(439$).specs:ram: 8gbSSD: 256gb nvmescreen:1080 fhd Ips displayprocessor : Ryzen 5 3500U 2.2 Ghz base freq.graphics: vega 8 2 GB internalweight: 1.6 kgI love its design and look. In this budget segment, it looks like a premium lap. It can run pubg lite in hard setting very smoothly. tested with blender 3d and adobe premier pro and result are good compared to intel laptop of same price.the only problem I am facing is with keyboard. there is no backlit and print on keys are not very dark. It's hard to see keys in the night. but overall I am happy with my laptop.

What 3D Printing resources do you find helpful?

Depends on what you are doing.One of the more important resources is the reprap wiki and it's forum. It may not be the simplest place to navigate but it is pretty much were the modern 3D printing movement stated. It is becoming less relevant in some way but a great deal of innovation continue from there today. In your interest in consumer kits printers or DIY 3D printers this is a great resource.Thingiverse is a good resource for things to print and to see what others are doing. Instructibles can give ideas for modifications or post print clean up, as well as see what others are doing with their printers.If you wish to design items, look into sketchup, fusion360, blender, or some other modeling package. YouTube has many tutorials to help learn any modeling package. Remember that since your making something that will be real, look up, tutorial that focus on designing for 3D printing. I am personally a blender user primarily and can say that blender had been focusing on a lesson plan specifically on modeling for 3D printing recently.If depending on what you want. You can get so work on designing for higher end machines by using a service like shapeways or ponoko. It can be costly, but the have tutorials and design specs for several materials, as wells as info how each material is printer. This can get some experience working with these materials and machine.If you have a Makerspace in your area, this could be the best source for information. Often they will have a printer or printers and people that know how to use them! You can likely get hands on experience.

At what age did you get your first personal computer?

I was 11 when I purchased this:The HP Pavilion g6, super budget laptop, was my FIRST laptop I have owned. I believe this cost me around $500, which got me an Intel Core i3 processor and a whopping 4 GB of RAM, and a 500 GB hard drive. It served me well for almost 6 years from 2011 to late 2016.Although it was old, this thing was durable AF. It survived two or three drops from a foot or two height, and also survived a full glass of V8 spilling into the keyboard.Then I started playing around with Blender 3D, FL Studio, and video editing, and the laptop inevitably started bogging down over time.Then I upgraded to this:Again, bought this with my own money: around $900. Obviously an upgrade from the HP. This one was a 2-in-1 touchscreen laptop, with an Intel i7 Processor, with 12 GB of RAM (I think) and a 1 TB hard drive. Well, this guy didn’t last long, because he was a refurb (I advise against purchasing refurbished laptops). The hard drive died after not even one year of use, and my dad replaced it. Then that hard drive died three days later, and we discovered the motherboard was faulty! Great!Well, need a new laptop again! I received this one for Christmas of that year:Which is the laptop I currently use. Around $1100, it has 16 GB of RAM, an Intel Core i7, and a 1 TB hard drive. However, it’s missing something I really need now that I never thought I needed with my previous laptops: a good graphics card.So I taught myself the basics of computer hardware last year and put together a plan to build myself the ultimate PC! Up until this point, getting myself an actual PC seemed so far out of reach, I never considered it to be an option. However, once I learned what I wanted in a computer, I was set on buying a cheap computer and upgrading it over the course of a few years using a detailed road-map I wrote out one day.Then I went to a Micro Center and found a pre-built with all of the specs I wanted, plus some better stuff, for a fraction of the cost I had in mind. It was on sale, on clearance, open-box, previously on display, and was a discontinued model. I saved nearly $800 that day, and took out a loan from my parents which I finally paid back a few months ago. This is it:(and sorry for the grainy pics, I had an iPhone 5s when I took these photos)Now, I am sporting a Powerspec PC with a GTX 1080, 32 GB DDR4 3200 MHz RAM, Intel Core i7 7700K processor, 2 TB hard drive alongside a 500 GB SSD. All for $1150 (not the 32 GB, I upgraded from 16 to 32 GB a few months ago). Not bad for a work station!EDIT: Thought it would be fair to mention that our family had many PCs before I got my first laptop. The first time I remember using an actual PC was when I was about 5 or 6 to use Microsoft Word, since I was going through a weird phase where I liked to write about animals and print out the pages and staple them into “animal books.” So I interacted with computers for the first time around 2005 or so.UPDATE: Aaaand that laptop got stolen, so I am now using the Surface Pro 6 Core i5 8GB Cobalt Blue model.

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