On Monday, May 18, 2015, Ken Pettit petti...@gmail.com wrote:
Yeah, I've looked *many* times doing quite exhaustive searches just about
everywhere I could think of looking for a similarly sized / shaped LCD.
Nada, unless you want to order 10,000 of them.
So that means we would have to be
This bit doesn't deal with the M100, but...
this board looks small enough to fit inside an old-fashioned (big)
pocket watch case. If one could put a decent display on it, and maybe a
very thin membrane keyboard in the watch's lid, it would make a very
cool steampunk pocket computer.
I can't
A shame parts like this battery cover couldn't be made on somebody's 3D
printer.
I just need the price to come down a bit more before I can afford a
low-end one sigh
it makes us all happy to hear of a success story such as that one.
On 18 May 2015 at 16:12, John Gardner gof...@gmail.com wrote:
...Low and behold it works!
Or High and behold, as the case may be - Good show! :)
CAD may be useful, but I think you’ll find that the 3-printer boom uses
scanners for much of the work being done. The scanners run about as much again
as the comparable printers; the larger $2,500 ~ $5000 models have the capacity
for typical work, like 3 x 3 x 3 ft. Again, service bureaus so
There is a BASIC for Nintendo DS/DSi called Petit Computer. For the 3DS release
it's called Smile Basic.
http://smilebasic.com/en/
But the touchscreen keyboard sucks for any writing.
John Martin johnjessemar...@gmail.com kirjoitti 19.5.2015 kello 2.17:
Hello, I am new. I was wondering if
I was searching the internet to fond cheap 3-D printers.
This is what I found.
http://www.microcenter.com/site/brands/3D_printing.aspx?ekw=3D_Printingrd=1
...Low and behold it works!
Or High and behold, as the case may be - Good show! :)