I have a 2u drawer that could accept a face panel. It would actually be super useful to be able to access the equipment behind without taking the rack off the wall.
Yes, manifold has been the way to go. I still get geometric artifacts with fast-csg and it doesn't nearly have the same impact on performance. Took a day-long compilation down to 10m for me just adding the `--enable manifold` flag.
I spend an evening hacking together a stack of boards to create a drone interface for both my transmitter (via https://github.com/mikeneiderhauser/CRSFJoystick) and my goggles with a HDMI to composite to 5.8GHz video link.
Is there a maintained open source server counterpart?
It’s really great to see games that would otherwise die live on through a community. Ultima online is a great example with the likes of ClassicUO (amazing client) and ModernUO (an active attempt at a modernised server)
Yes there were many. This is how I got into programming in 2006. The fact that OSRS even happened is because Jagex was losing a lot of people to private servers.
I've been out of the community for 1.5 decades now but there (used to) be a thriving private server community at https://rune-server.org/index.php which shaped my entire programming career
Whether there are still actively maintained ones I'm not sure though.
Also Runelite isn’t open source client per se, its just open source client wrapper that makes many functions available through stable API and adds plugins.
I switched from years old Arctic silver 5 to Noctua NT-H1. It resulted in a dramatic difference. 64c loaded vs 84c -- I now suspect I had an air bubble which may invalidate the initial motivation for the work in the first place :-)
The first thing I noticed was that your idle temperatures are exceedingly high, especially for an AIO. My air-cooled ryzen 5 idles at around 35c with nearly zero fan speed on a $30 air cooler.
Most AIOs need servicing after a few years- find instructions on how to disassemble yours, clean the water block, flush the radiator, and refill with a deionized-water/glycol mix.
You likely have a setting for fan ramp time in your bios, usually in seconds. So setting your pump to always run at 100% and your fans to ramp slowly, say 10 seconds or longer, and using a minimum fan speed that is as high as tolerable would likely work as a no-additional-code solution.
Looks pretty cool, the self-calibration routine is very nice too.
My only worry is that rapid changes in pump speed might cause extra mechanical stress or wear on the pump, but I have no data to back that up. I've just heard that water pumps sometimes behave in counter-intuitive ways - e.g: sometimes running at a higher speed is better for longevity than a lower one.