• Smokeydope@lemmy.world
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    36 minutes ago

    I am a developer for a free open source game inspired by minecraft called Voxelibre, and I have also made one of the most popular mods for it.

    I started almost three years ago with a simple typo bugfix not knowing anything about code or pixel art making but liked it enough to learn through hard work and effort.

    Development is a collaborative effort between many people so I cant call the game mine but ive been working on it a few years and it feels like I’m part of the legacy at this point. I am proud of how far the project as a whole have come.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    I furnitured!

    I built this planter box, along with one three times as long as this one, out of cedar

    This little table for my porch out of some lovely local white oak. It’s a humble little thing but I’m rather proud of it because it’s the first project I made with genuine mortise and tenon joints, some chopped by hand with a chisel.

    A plant stand, also out of white oak. This one has slanted and tapered legs, and Avril Lavigne wrote a song about it. Why DID I have to make things so complicated?

    And two bookcases from birch plywood and white pine. I was particularly careful planning this one, and managed to get the carcass and shelves of each bookcase out of a single sheet of 3/4" plywood, though it does mean the grain direction on the fixed bottom shelf doesn’t make sense.

  • 7fb2adfb45bafcc01c80@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    So many things!

    We moved to a new house a couple of years ago and I mapped out the whole property, put it into LibreCAD, designed the space, and have been planting/building it since then. I now have thousands of plants, over 1000 unique types, and a vegetable garden in our 1/3 acre lot. I’m very proud of it, but don’t really know how to best share it with the world (or if anyone cares).

    I also have a web site that I’ve been building forever, lots of little programs, things like my irrigation system built from a Raspberry Pi, my homelab, all of the plants that I start from seed in the spring for the garden (thousands under grow lights with heated mats), the hydroponic system… I’m sure there’s more.

  • Chee_Koala@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I’m developing my first vidyagame, an RTS Clicker survival where you have to grow to be the largest organism on the planet, called Infinitree. Steampage going up in February, prototype is going out to F&F this month. Check out The Infinitree website for more info :-)

  • BrattiAtti@reddthat.com
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    14 hours ago

    I’ve been refining this idea for about a year. I began it using a different medium, but the idea of P2025 and the reelection of dipshit spurred me to look at alternatives. I would like to get this idea out there, but I think fb has been blocking my posts, lolol.

    Right now, everything is through Printful (I know, I know), but I’ll order some stuff from Sticky brand and move over to Etsy once I’ve made a few sales.

    https://stickrshockr.printful.me/product/american-pride-single-kiss-cut-sticker-american-pride-flag

    I have a lot more ideas to continue and expand the series. We’ll see if it gets anywhere.

    My dad would be so proud. /s

  • Justin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    23 hours ago

    I’ve put together two servers for self hosting a lot of services for myself, rather than relying on platforms that continually get worse.

    The one on top, a retired Datto backup machine, hosts TrueNAS scale with a bunch of different services (Pihole, Jellyfin, Immich, etc.) and our network shares. The bottom one, Dell PowerEdge R620, runs Fedora server. I plan to use it for locally hosted game servers, but it just runs Minecraft (AllTheMods 10).

    I’ve used knowledge I’ve gained in the IT space to set up the networks, and even have a VLAN running for an Ubuntu server VM of which I host for a coworker to learn on.

  • mwproductions@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    A podcast called Almost Plausible, where a couple of friends and I take an ordinary object (such as a ceiling fan, a paperclip, or a toilet brush) and we create a movie plot based on that object.

    You can find the show anywhere you listen to podcasts.

  • LemmyFeed@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    I made my own, single source bubble hash live rosin, from seed to final product, all by myself and it came out the best I’ve ever done.

    I don’t really have anyone to share it with who would understand and I don’t know if any of you get it either, but I’m super happy with the end result and proud of all the work I did.

    • pleasejustdie@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Looks great, I bought a press recently, but trying in shake I have decided I need to grow my own plant to do that and get good results. I was thinking about doing it, but seeing what you got out in now more motivated to get that done this year.

      • LemmyFeed@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        The hardest part is starting my dude! I highly recommend trying to grow at least once. It’s a lot of time and effort to grow it, harvest it, turn it to bubble hash, and then press it into rosin, but I find it very rewarding, especially now that I’m making decent product. You can also apply a lot of what you lean growing cannabis towards growing food crops like tomatoes and corn.

  • So much software.

    The problem is, the target audience is so niche: CLI users, developers, people who value shallow dependencies, heterogenous environments, and localism. Not by any means unique or even rare, but certainly a minority. And I hate marketing and self-promotion, so it makes it difficult for me to even post release announcements.

    Luckily, I’m mostly scratching my own itches, so userbase size isn’t important, but knowing that at least a few other people are getting value out of my work would be nice.

    Ima clarify that: large userbases are a royal PITA. Yes, there are benefits, but the sense if obligation can be oppressive, and it’s hard to find ways of saying “no” nicely.

    • Cratermaker
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      6 hours ago

      What software have you made? Sometimes people make me feel crazy when I tell them it’s bad to have deeply nested dependencies. Often I’ll dismiss a library if it depends on other things. I think the software world is rife with the idea that “if it works now, then my job is done”.

    • Oka@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      I relate. Marketing myself feels like lying at best, or trying to get people’s money at worst. I wish I could just say “hey I made this thing, i hope it helps in some way” without putting a price tag on it.

        • Yes, but it’s that act of self-promotion that is the issue, not whether you’re charging for it. It can be almost worse for OSS, because users can be astonishingly critical, demanding, and insulting about something you’re giving away for free. If I was charging for it, I would be less offended, because they’d have some justification for being irksome.

          Promoting your software still feels like sales, somehow - that’s growing up in a capitalism, I guess, plus you’re opening yourself to all that criticism.

    • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I can relate. I wrote an insanely good optimiser for the loading of data to the trading platform for a major fund management company and there are like… 2… people in the world who know and appreciate

      • Kraiden@kbin.earth
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        5 hours ago

        Ha ha ha, ye, practical it is not! In my defense, it started as trying to solve a real problem I was having. The keyboard doesn’t have a capslock/numlock indicator, so I had the idea of using the backlight as an indicator.

        Got that running, but I was having fun so I decided to make a little snake game

        Showed that to a friend who made the usual joke of “ok yeah, but what about doom?”

        I knew it was going to be unplayable, but I’ve never actually put doom onto something weird before and it felt like a rite of passage, so I thought why not. It was surprisingly easy! Only took an hour or so thanks to doomgeneric

    • kabi@lemm.ee
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      24 hours ago

      For a second, I thought that was a shell casing next to the frog. Which, admittedly, would have made for a more intriguing narrative.

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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        24 hours ago

        You mean the acorn shard or the piece of stick?

        I’ve similarly been told before it looks like the frog is smoking or chewing on the blade of grass.

        • kabi@lemm.ee
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          23 hours ago

          The piece of stick. Though I couldn’t so positively identify it, hence the momentary confusion!

    • 🐋 Color 🍁 ♀@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      I like the second drawing with the motion of the wind and the pillars! Nice photos too! 😃 Forest one is such a vibe

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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        1 day ago

        Thanks.

        Interestingly enough the one with the wind is based on a dream I had. It may be why it came out so vivid.

  • wjrii@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Around a year and a half ago I started making my own keyboards. Like, I still use normal switches, normal keycaps, and off-the-shelf microcontrollers & firmware, but the layout and the structure are my own design, mostly fabricated at home. After a few experiments (one ortho, one ergo, one macropad, and one gutting of a broken off-the-shelf to try something larger) , I had three keyboards’ worth of aluminum plates made. One was pretty basic but has remained a favorite and another really hit my retro intent for the design, but the second was sort of an ignored middle-child because it wasn’t as refined as the third, or as earnest and satisfying as the first. I fixed it by designing a wrap-around case for it, changing the keycaps, and adding a little solenoid so it sounds like a telegraph machine whenever I flip a little switch. I’m really pleased that I was able to retrofit it to make it stupidly fun to type on. My boards are not exactly the perfectly-finished CNC aluminum showpieces some enjoy, but it’s deeply satisfying to go from a pile of electronic bits, some sheet goods, and a reel of printer filament, to a functioning piece of daily-use equipment.

    pics

      • wjrii@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Thanks! They’re the twins of the one I just spruced up. The gray one is bare aluminum with oak spacers. Construction wise, it ended up looking a LOT like Matt3o’s BrownFox from like ten years earlier. No surprise, I suspect. The Swill plate generator I used was likely borne out of people wanting to do similar projects. It has Box Navy switches combined with Vortex-designed VSA keycaps that you can find mislabeled all over ebay/AliExpress/etc. as “double shot DSA”, except for the BBC Micro inspired F row, with is just 12 red DSA blanks and one that I lasered a design onto.

        pic

        The yellow one has “Fauxly Panda” no-name heavy tactiles from Aliexpress, a 3-D printed case and feet, Akko “SA-L” keycaps, and a design (very) loosely inspired by the later Atari 8-bits. The color scheme is meant to sort of vaguely evoke the original 400 and 800. I am really pleased with this layout, which is just a TKL with the F-row shoved over, a few missing keys above the nav cluster, the Shifts split in two, and the modifiers shrunk down and reduced to give that “dangling spacebar” look so many old keyboards have. Only thing I’d do different is not split the left Shift. I just never got used to having two keys there, so all three boards now just map shift to both keys.

        pic

        This has been an immensely fun hobby, and I’ve probably done a dozen projects by now, though I’ve probably topped out how refined my designs can be and still be fabbed on a 5W diode laser and an Ender 3 clone. Last project before the solenoid and aesthetic retrofit was my goofy no-stabilizers Battlecruiser, which I’m currently using for work.

      • wjrii@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Oh hell yes, the compact layouts that keep their numpads are my usual preference, though in adding numpads I also decided to do my own plates on my home laser, and that was easier without longer keys, so they got a little… weird.

        • First one. Did my own (slightly cockeyed) legends on the keycaps.
        • Second one. F Row returns. Tried to make a case that fit the weird layout. More DIY legends.
        • Third one. Tried to do a southpaw and minimize the need for custom keys, though it still benefits from a few.
        • Back to F-row-less. Careful selection can make this work with purchased caps. It also has a PCB, though the microcontroller is just manually wired instead of being integrated or even socketed.
        • HEHEHEHEHEHE.
        • Bonus. Numpads don’t have to be part of the board.
        • y0kai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 hours ago

          I did not realize I need a lefty numpad.

          I’m not a lefty, but as an accountant, it’d be great to use my mouse without taking my hand off the numpad

          • wjrii@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            They’re really more for use cases like yours and for gamers who want/need one but want to keep their mice close in. As with most well-known layout concepts in the hobby, Keychron sells some. I found it to be… fine, but obviously mine has more compromises than usual. I mostly use one of those smaller ones that still has a right-hand numpad (typing on the black and white one now), or I keep that external numpad to the right of my mouse.

            • y0kai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              3 hours ago

              Thanks, I might check that out. I just got my first mechanical keyboard for Christmas and am loving it. I wonder if I can talk work in to buying me a lefty one.